Database-SQL-RDBMS HOW-TO document for Linux (PostgreSQL Object Relational Database System) Al Dev (Alavoor Vasudevan) alavoor@yahoo.com v28.0, 10 July 2000 This document is a "practical guide" to very quickly setup a SQL Database engine and front end tools on a Unix system. It also dis­ cusses the International standard language ANSI/ISO SQL and reviews the merits/advantages of the SQL database engine developed by the world-wide internet in an "open development" environment. It is about HOW-TO setup a next generation Object Relational SQL Database "Post­ greSQL" on Unix system which can be used as a Application Database Server or as a Web Database Server. PostgreSQL attempts to implement current and future International ISO/ANSI SQL standards. This document also gives information on the database interface programs like Front End GUIs, RAD tools (Rapid Application Development), ODBC, JDBC drivers, "C", "C++", Java, Perl programming interfaces and Web Database Tools. Information given here applies to all Unix/Windows NT platforms and to all other SQL databases. It will be very useful for people who are new to Databases, SQL language and PostgreSQL. This document also has SQL tutorial, SQL syntax which would be very helpful for beginners. Experienced people will find this document as a useful reference guide. For students, the information given here will enable them to get the source code for PostgreSQL relational database system, from which they can learn as to how a RDBMS SQL database engine is created. ______________________________________________________________________ Table of Contents 1. Introduction 2. Laws of Physics apply to Software! 3. What is PostgreSQL ? 3.1 White Paper 4. Which one? PostgreSQL or MySQL ? 5. Where to get it ? 6. PostgreSQL Quick-Installation Instructions 6.1 Install and Test 6.2 PostgreSQL RPMs 6.3 Maximum RPM 6.4 Examples RPM 6.5 Testing PyGreSQL - Python interface 6.6 Testing Perl - Perl interface 6.7 Testing libpq, libpq++ interfaces 6.8 Testing Java interfaces 6.9 Testing ecpg interfaces 6.10 Testing SQL examples - User defined types and functions 6.11 Testing Tcl/Tk interfaces 6.12 Testing ODBC interfaces 6.13 Testing MPSQL Motif-worksheet interfaces 6.14 Verification 6.15 Emergency Bug fixes 7. Quick Start Guide 7.1 Creating, Dropping, Renaming Database 7.2 Creating, Dropping users 7.3 Creating, Dropping Groups 7.4 Create, Edit, Drop a table 7.5 Create, Edit, Drop records in a table 7.6 Switch active Database 7.7 Backup and Restore database 7.8 Security of database 7.9 Online help 7.10 PostgreSQL Documentation 8. PostgreSQL Supports Extremely Large Databases greater than 200 Gig 9. How can I trust PostgreSQL ? Regression Test Package builds customer confidence 10. Security of Database 10.1 User Authentication 10.2 Host-Based Access Control 10.3 Authentication Methods 10.4 Access Control 10.5 Secure TCP/IP Connection via SSH 10.6 Kerberos Authentication 11. GUI FrontEnd Tool for PostgreSQL (Graphical User Interface) 12. Interface Drivers for PostgreSQL 12.1 ODBC Drivers for PostgreSQL 12.2 UDBC Drivers for PostgreSQL 12.3 JDBC Drivers for PostgreSQL 12.4 Java for PostgreSQL 13. Perl Database Interface (DBI) Driver for PostgreSQL 13.1 Perl 5 interface for PostgreSQL 13.2 Perl Database Interface DBI 13.2.1 WHAT IS DBI ? 13.2.2 DBI driver for PostgreSQL DBD-Pg-0.89 13.2.3 Technical support for DBI 13.2.4 What is DBI, DBperl, Oraperl and *perl? 13.2.5 DBI specifications 13.2.6 Compilation problems or "It fails the test" 13.2.7 Is DBI supported under Windows 95 / NT platforms? 13.2.8 Is DBI any use for CGI programming? 13.2.9 How do I get faster connection times with DBD Oracle and CGI? 13.2.10 How do I get persistent connections with DBI and CGI? 13.2.11 ``When I run a perl script from the command line, it works, but, when I run it under the httpd, it fails!'' Why? 13.2.12 Multi-threading with DBI? 13.2.13 How can I invoke stored procedures with DBI? 13.2.14 How can I get return values from stored procedures with DBI? 13.2.15 How can I create or drop a database with DBI? 13.2.16 How are NULL values handled by DBI? 13.2.17 What are these func methods all about? 13.2.18 Commercial Support and Training 13.3 Testing Perl interface 14. PostgreSQL Management Tools 14.1 PGACCESS - A GUI Tool for PostgreSQL Management 14.2 Windows Interactive Query Tool for PostgreSQL (WISQL or MPSQL) 14.3 Interactive Query Tool (ISQL) for PostgreSQL called PSQL 14.4 MPMGR - A Database Management Tool for PostgresSQL 15. CPUs for PostgreSQL 16. Setting up multi-boxes PostgreSQL with just one monitor 17. Web-Application-Servers for PostgreSQL 17.1 Lutris Corp "Enhydra" 17.2 Zope 18. Applications and Tools for PostgreSQL 18.1 PostgreSQL 4GL for web database applications - AppGEN Development System 18.2 WWW Web interface for PostgresSQL - DBENGINE 18.3 Apache Webserver Module for PostgreSQL - NeoSoft NeoWebScript 18.4 HEITML server side extension of HTML and a 4GL language for PostgreSQL 18.5 America On-line AOL Web server for PostgreSQL 18.6 Problem/Project Tracking System Application Tool for PostgreSQL 18.7 Convert dbase dbf files to PostgreSQL 18.8 Convert Microsoft Access MDB database files to PostgreSQL 19. Web Database Design/Implementation tool for PostgreSQL - EARP 19.1 What is EARP ? 19.2 Implementation 19.3 How does it work ? 19.4 Where to get EARP ? 20. PHP Hypertext Preprocessor - Server-side html-embedded scripting language for PostgreSQL 20.1 Major Features 20.2 PHP - Brief History 20.3 So, what can I do with PHP ? 20.4 A simple example 20.5 CGI Redirection 20.5.1 Apache 1.0.x Notes 20.5.2 Netscape HTTPD 20.5.3 NCSA HTTPD 20.6 Running PHP from the command line 20.7 PHPGem package 21. Python Interface for PostgreSQL 21.1 Where to get PyGres ? 21.2 Information and support 21.3 Testing Python interface 22. Gateway between PostgreSQL and the WWW - WDB-P95 22.1 About wdb-p95 22.2 Does the PostgreSQL server, pgperl, and httpd have to be on the same host? 23. "C", "C++", ESQL/C language Interfaces and Bitwise Operators for PostgreSQL 23.1 "C" interface 23.2 "C++" interface 23.3 ESQL/C 23.4 BitWise Operators for PostgreSQL 24. Japanese Kanji Code for PostgreSQL 25. PostgreSQL Port to Windows 95/Windows NT 25.1 Authors of NT port 25.2 Install the Cygwin package 25.3 Tuneup Bash Window 25.4 Install the Andy Piper tools 25.5 Install Ludovic Lange's Cygwin32 IPC package 25.6 Install PostgreSQL 26. Mailing Lists 26.1 E-mail account for PostgreSQL 26.2 English Mailing List 26.3 Archive of Mailing List 26.4 Spanish Mailing List 27. Documentation and Reference Books 27.1 User Guides and Manuals 27.2 Online Documentation 27.3 Useful Reference Textbooks 27.4 ANSI/ISO SQL Specifications documents - SQL 1992, SQL 1998 27.5 Syntax of ANSI/ISO SQL 1992 27.6 Syntax of ANSI/ISO SQL 1998 27.7 SQL Tutorial for beginners 27.8 Temporal Extension to SQL92 27.9 Part 0 - Acquiring ISO/ANSI SQL Documents 27.10 Part 1 - ISO/ANSI SQL Current Status 27.11 Part 2 - ISO/ANSI SQL Foundation 27.12 Part 3 - ISO/ANSI SQL Call Level Interface 27.13 Part 4 - ISO/ANSI SQL Persistent Stored Modules 27.14 Part 5 - ISO/ANSI SQL/Bindings 27.15 Part 6 - ISO/ANSI SQL XA Interface Specialization (SQL/XA) 27.16 Part 7 - ISO/ANSI SQL Temporal 27.16.1 INTRODUCTION 27.16.2 A CASE STUDY - STORING CURRENT INFORMATION 27.16.3 A CASE STUDY - STORING HISTORY INFORMATION 27.16.4 A CASE STUDY - PROJECTION 27.16.5 A CASE STUDY - JOIN 27.16.6 A CASE STUDY - AGGREGATES 27.16.7 SUMMARY 27.17 Part 8 - ISO/ANSI SQL MULTIMEDIA (SQL/MM) 28. Technical support for PostgreSQL 28.1 Commercial Support 29. Economic and Business Aspects 30. List of Other Databases 31. Internet World Wide Web Searching Tips 32. Conclusion 33. FAQ - Questions on PostgreSQL 34. Other Formats of this Document 35. Copyright and License 36. Appendix A - Syntax of ANSI/ISO SQL 1992 37. Appendix B - SQL Tutorial for beginners 37.1 Tutorial for PostgreSQL 37.2 Internet URL pointers 37.3 On-line SQL tutorials 38. Appendix C - Linux Quick Install Instructions ______________________________________________________________________ 1. Introduction The purpose of this document is to provide comprehensive list of pointers/URLs to quickly setup PostgreSQL and also to advocate the benefits of Open Source Code system like PostgreSQL, Linux. Each and every computer system in the world needs a database to store/retrieve the information. The primary reason you use the computer is to store, retrieve and process information and do all these very quickly, thereby saving you time. At the same time, the system must be simple, robust, fast, reliable, economical and very easy to use. Database is the most VITAL SYSTEM as it stores mission critical information of every company in this world. Each and every industry in this world needs a database system. Industries like telecom, automobile, banks, airlines, etc.. will not function efficiently without a database system. The most popular database systems are based on the International Standard Organisation (ISO) SQL specifications and ANSI SQL (American) standards. The current specifications widely used in the industry are ISO/ANSI SQL 1992. Upcoming standard is the SQL 1998/99 which is also called SQL-3 is still under development. Popular database like Oracle, Sybase and Informix systems are based on these standards or are trying to implement these standards. Without a standard like ANSI/ISO SQL, it would be very difficult for the customer to develop a application once and run on all the database systems. End user wants to develop an application ONCE using ISO SQL, ODBC, JDBC and deploy on all variety of database systems in the world. The world's most popular FREE Database which implements some of the ISO SQL, ANSI SQL/98, SQL/92 and ANSI SQL/89 RDBMS is PostgreSQL. PostgreSQL is next generation Object relational database and is targeting on full compliance of SQL standards like ISO/ANSI SQL. PostgreSQL is the only free RDBMS in the world which supports Object databases and SQL. This document will tell you how-to install the database, how to set up the Web database, application database, front end GUIs and interface programs. It is strongly advised that you MUST write your database applications 100 % compliant to standards of ISO/ANSI SQL, ODBC, JDBC so that your application is portable across multiple databases like PostgreSQL, Oracle, Sybase, Informix etc. You get the highest quality, and lot many features with PostgreSQL as it follows 'Open Source Code development model'. Open Source Code model is the one where the complete source code is given to you and the development takes place on the internet by a extremely vast network of human brains. Future trend shows that most of the software development will take place on the so called "Information Super- Highway" which spans the whole globe. In the coming years, internet growth will be explosive which will further fuel rapid adoption of PostgreSQL by the industry. By applying the principles of statistics, mathematics and science to software quality, you get the best quality of software only in a 'Open Source Code System' like PostgreSQL, wherein the source code is open to a very vast number of human brains inter-connected by the information super-highway. Greater the number of human brains working, the better will be the quality of software. Open Source Code model will also prevent RE-INVENTION OF WHEELS, eliminates DUPLICATION OF WORK and will be very economical, saves time in distribution and follows the modern economic laws of optimizing the national and global resources. Once a software work is done by others, then you DO NOT need to re-do that again. You will not be wasting your valuable time on something which had already been WELL DONE. Your time is extremely precious and it must be utilized efficiently, because you have only 8 hours a day for doing work. As we will be entering the 21st century, there will be a change in the way that you get software for your use. Everybody will give first preference for the open source softwares like PostgreSQL, Linux. If you buy binaries, you will not get any equity and ownership of source code. Source code is a very valuable asset and binaries have no value. Buying software may become a thing of the past. You only need to buy good hardware, it is worth spending money on the hardware and get the software from internet. Important point is that it is the computer hardware which is doing bulk of the work. Hardware is the real work horse and software is just driving it. Computer hardware is so much more complex that only 6 nations in the world so far have demonstrated the capability of designing and manufacturing computer chips/hardware. Design and manufacturing of computer chips is a advanced technology. It is a very complex process, capital intensive, requires large investments in plant and production machines which deal with 0.18 micron (even smaller than 0.18) technology. On a single small silicon chip millions of transistors/circuits are densely packed. Companies like Applied Material, AMD, Intel, Cyrix, Hitachi, IBM and others spent significant number of man-years to master the high-technology like Chip Design, Micro-electronics and Nano- electronics. Micro means (one-millionth of meter 10^-6), Nano means (one-billionth of meter 10^-9). Current technology uses micro- electronics of about 0.35 micron using aluminum as conductors and 0.25 micron sizes using copper as conductors of electrons. In near future the technology of 0.10 micron with copper and even nano-electronics will be used to make computer chips. Aluminum conductors will be phased out by copper on computer chips, as copper is a better conductor of electrons. In photolithography process extreme ultraviolet, X-ray or electron-beam techniques will be used to etch circuits for feature size less than 0.15 micron. In about 20 years from now, silicon chips will be phased out by molecular computers and bio chips which will be billions of times faster than silicon chips. Molecules are a group of atoms. And atoms are tiny particles which makes up everything that you see in this world. Molecular computers will use the molecules of matter as ultra-fast electronic on/off switches. When the switch is ON it indicates 1, and when it is OFF it indicates 0. All the computer programs in this world are based on binary (numbers 1 and 0). Table below shows the progress and future advancement trends of computer chips. Advancement of chip capabilities in future ******************************************** +--------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+---------+ | Item/Year | 1997 | 1999 | 2001 | 2003 | 2012 | 2020 | +--------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+---------+ | Feature size(micron) | 0.25 | 0.18 | 0.15 | 0.13 | 0.05 |< 0.00001| +--------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+---------+ | Wafer size(mm) | 200 | 300 | 300 | 300 | 450 | Mol/Bio | +--------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+---------+ | Min Operating Voltage | 1.8-2.5 | 1.5-1.8 | 1.2-1.5 | 1.2-1.5 | 0.5-0.6| < 0.001 | +--------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+---------+ | Max power dissipation | 70 | 90 | 110 | 130 | 175 | 600 | +--------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+---------+ | On-chip frequencey (MHz) | 750 | 1,250 | 1,500 | 2,100 | 10,000 | > 50,000| +--------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+---------+ | DRAM capacity | 256 MB | 1 GB | 2 GB | 4 GB | 256 GB | > 1000GB| +--------------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+--------+---------+ As you can see, it is hardware that is high technology and important and software is labor intensive but is a less difficult technology. On other hand, each and every country in the world develops/makes software. In fact, any person in this world with a small low-cost PC can write software. Databases like Oracle, Informix, Sybase, IBM DB2 (Unix) are written using the "C" language and binaries are created by compiling the source code and then they are shipped out to customers. Oracle, Sybase, Informix databases are 100 % "C" programs!! Since a lot of work had been done on PostgreSQL for the past 14 years, it does not make sense to re-create from scratch another database system which satisfies ANSI/ISO SQL. It will be a great advantage to take the existing code and add missing features or enhancements to PostgreSQL and start using it immediately. Prediction is that demand for "Internet products" like PostgreSQL will grow exponentially as it is capable of maintaining a high quality, low cost, extremely large user-base and developer-base. Those nations which do not use the 'Internet products' will be seriously missing "World-wide Internet Revolution" and will be left far behind other countries. The reason is "Internet" itself is the world's LARGEST "software company" and is a large software "power house"! 2. Laws of Physics apply to Software! In this chapter, it will be shown how science plays a important role in the creation of various objects like software, this universe, mass, atoms, energy and even yourself! This chapter also shows why knowledge of science is very important before you start using the products of science. The golden rule is - "You MUST not use a product without understanding how it is created!!" This rule applies to everything - database sytems, computer system, operating system, this universe and even your own human body! It means that you should have complete source code and information about the system. It is important to understand how human body and atoms inside human body works since humans are creating PostgreSQL, MS Windows95 etc.. Creation is a very important step. Persons who are using the objects of science must know how it is created. This applies to even computer systems and PostgreSQL. A majority of people do not have knowledge of science and hence do not know how systems like MS Windows NT/95, Oracle, human body and this universe are created. A vast majority of people do not know what made the universe and MS Windows 95/NT and what is inside it. Complex systems are built from very simple basic building blocks like - millions of universes are created, each universe in turn has millions of super-clusters, each super-cluster has millions of galaxies, each galaxy has millions of stars, some stars system have many planets, each planet in turn is made up billions of atoms.(In the history of this world, only one universe was created by a man in ancient India eons ago, but no other case had been reported in the modern history. Nations around the world are trying to create a universe). Creating a universe is a much more advanced technology and is more advanced than the atomic bomb which was dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki causing horrible destruction. Modern nuclear weapons are so tiny and powerful that if such a single nuclear bomb is dropped in pacific ocean then it can completely vaporise the planet earth! The total variety of weapons are infinity!! Nuclear weapons and other more powerful divine weapons were used in the battle field in ancient India! Nobody believed Albert Eienstein (a scientist of 1900's) when he said nuclear weapons can be made which can vaporise big cities. And today nobody believes that man can create a universe. Software like MS Windows 95 is created simply by "C" and assembler language programs which simply uses 1 and 0 and universes like ours are created simply by dashing TWO dissimilar but proper of combination of tiny atomic particles of other dimensions. (Something interesting happened just before dashing of tiny particles) A human body is created by dashing two dissimilar but proper combination of tiny cells!! (Something interesting happened just before dashing of tiny cells) Humans inherited the properties of this universe. The universe you are currently living in was NOT there - all the atoms inside the universe was not there and not even TIME was existing!! Baby universe was born during big bang and started expanding and kept growing. Even today our universe is still expanding!! A person from another universe by name 'Brahma' created this universe you are currently living in. It is indeed possible for man to create a new universe. Total number of universes that can be created is INFINITY and similarly total number of operating systems that can be created is also infinity!! Infinite number universes and infinite variety of multi-dimensional atoms collapse down into few primary-dimensional- universe. Very advanced mathematical equations support this theory. The laws of science and statistics favour the open-source code system like PostgreSQL and Linux. As the internet speed is increasing everyday, and internet is becoming more and MORE reliable, the open- source code system will gain very rapid momentum. And, if rules of statistics and laws of physics are correct, awareness of science grows and when IGNORANT people start learning science then the closed source-code systems will eventually vanish from this planet. Developing a project like PostgreSQL requires resources like energy and time, hence PostgreSQL is a product of energy and time. Since energy and time can be explained only by science, there is a direct co-relation between physics and software projects like PostgreSQL, Linux. Laws of science (Physics) applies everywhere and at all the times, to anything that you do, even while you are developing the software projects. Physics is in action even while you are talking (sound waves), walking (friction between ground and your feet), reading a book or writing software. Every science in this world has a deep root in mathematics, including PostgreSQL. PostgreSQL uses 'Modern Algebra' which is a tiny branch of mathematics. Modern algebra deals with 'Set Theory', 'Relational Algebra', science of Groups, Rings, Collections, Sets, Unions, Intersections, Exclusions, Domains, Lists, etc... The software like PostgreSQL is existing today because of the energy and time. And mass and energy are ONE and the SAME entity. The fact that mass and energy are same was unknown to people 100 years ago! And even today it is unknown to world population that internet is the largest software "power house" and the largest "software company" in the world! Cells in the human brains consume energy while processing (creating software), by converting the chemical energy from food into electrical and heat energy. Even while you are reading this paragraph, the cells in your brain are burning out the fuel and are using tiny amounts of energy. All of these implies that human brain is a thermodynamic heat engine. Because human brain is a thermodynamic engine, the laws of thermodynamics applies to brain and hence thermodynamics has indirect effects on software like PostgreSQL. There can be infinite number of colors, computer langauages, computer chip designs and theories but there CANNOT be ONE SINGLE PERFECT color, computer language, design or system! What you can have is only a NEAR PERFECT color(wavelength), system, database, or theory! Nature is like a KALIEDOSCOPE - there are infinite number of dimensions, infinite variety particles of other dimensions but they all combine into very few primary dimensions and vice-versa. By combining the energies of millions of people around the world via internet it is possible to achieve a NEAR PERFECT system (including a database software system). Individually, the energy of each person will be minute, but by networking a large number of people, the total energy will be huge which can be focused on a project to generate a near perfect system. The energy is measured in Joules, kiloJoules or kilograms of mass, and time is measured in seconds or hours. And power is energy divided by time and is measured in Watts or kiloWatts . ______________________________________________________________________ Energy of each person = y Joules or in terms of mass Energy of each person = y grams The conversion factor between mass and energy is E = m * c * c where 'c' is the speed of light and 'm' is the mass. Time = 8 hours (This is constant since each person has only 8 hours a day) Power = Energy / Time = (y / (8 * 60 * 60) ) Watts Total Power of the world = n * (y / (8 * 60 * 60) ) Watts where n = number of persons working on the project. ______________________________________________________________________ From the above equation it is clear that increasing the 'n' will greatly improve the quality of product. Greater the 'n' then greater will be the power (in KiloWatts). You can wonder how much total energy (in KiloJoules) and total power (in KiloWatts) the global internet can focus on a system like Linux and PostgreSQL! It is very clear that internet can network a vast number of people, which implies internet has a lot of energy and time which can produce much higher quality software products in much shorter time as compared to commercial companies. Even very big companies like Microsoft and IBM cannot overpower and overrule the laws of Physics but will eventually SURRENDER UNTO laws of science! Conclusion is - because of laws of science, 'open source code' system like PostgreSQL, Linux will prevail and will be always much better than 'closed source code' system and it is possible to prove this statement scientifically. Man should not waste time creating too many duplicate software products. 3. What is PostgreSQL ? PostgreSQL is a free database, complete source code is given to you and is a Object-Relational Database System targetting on ANSI ISO/SQL 1998, 92 and runs on diverse hardware platforms and Operating systems. The ultimate objective and the final goal of PostgreSQL is to become 100 % compliant to ANSI/ISO SQL and also to become the number ONE open generic Database in the world. Today, PostgreSQL is the most advanced system in the world and it is surprising that many commercial database systems could not match the quality, features and capabilities of PostgreSQL !! PostgreSQL is the joint effort of many nations around the globe and is a project similar to International Space Station. PostgreSQL will remain the number one database system for many decades into future since it is a open-source code system. The fundamental idea behind PostgreSQL is - once a module of code is written than you should not waste even a milli-second of your time trying to re-invent it!! Informix Universal server (released 1997) is based on earlier version of PostgreSQL because Informix bought Illustra Inc. and integrated with Informix. Illustra database was based on Postgres (earlier version of PostgreSQL). PostgreSQL is an enhancement of the POSTGRES database management system, a next-generation DBMS research prototype. While PostgreSQL retains the powerful data model and rich data types of POSTGRES, it replaces the PostQuel query language with an extended subset of SQL. PostgreSQL development is being performed by a team of Internet developers who all subscribe to the PostgreSQL development mailing list. The current coordinator is Marc G. Fournier · scrappy@postgreSQL.org This team is now responsible for all current and future development of PostgreSQL. Ofcourse, the database customer himself is the developer of PostgreSQL! The development load is distributed among a very large number of database end-users on internet. The authors of PostgreSQL 1.01 were Andrew Yu and Jolly Chen. The original Postgres code, from which PostgreSQL is derived, was the effort of many graduate students, undergraduate students, and staff programmers and working under the direction of Professor Michael Stonebraker at the University of California, Berkeley. Millions of PostgreSQL is installed as Database servers, Web database servers and Application data servers. It is very sophisticated object relational database system (ORDBMS). PostgreSQL runs on Solaris, SunOS, HPUX, AIX, Linux, Irix, Digital Unix, BSDi,NetBSD, FreeBSD, SCO unix, NEXTSTEP, Unixware and all and every flavor of Unix. Port to Windows NT is done using Cygnus cygwin32 package. PostgreSQL and related items in this document are subject to the COPYRIGHT from University of California, Berkeley. 3.1. White Paper PostgreSQL details in nutshell: · Title: PostgreSQL SQL RDBMS Database (Object Relational Database Management System) · Current Version: 7.0.1 · Age: PostgreSQL is 15 years old. Developed since 1985 · Authors: Developed by millions/universities/companies on internet for the past 15 YEARS The white paper on PostgreSQL is at 4. Which one? PostgreSQL or MySQL ? MySQL is another open-source SQL server, but it does not support transactions. It is suitable for very small databases and does not support advanced SQL functionalities. Whereas PostgreSQL is a enterprise strength database supporting transactions and almost all SQL constructs. PostgreSQL is much more advanced than commercial databases like Oracle, Sybase and Informix. PostgreSQL supports very advanced locking mechanisms and many more advanced features which are not available in commercial database systems!! In near future development of MySQL will be dropped, since MySQL is duplicate product working towards ANSI SQL. And all the MySQL users will be migrated to PostgreSQL. Also MySQL is a 'quasi-commercial' product unlike PostgreSQL which is open-source and there is no license fee. There is no need for another SQL database system as PostgreSQL is already here in this world!! Duplicate products like MySQL confuse the user base and causes division of resources. For a "NEAR PERFECT" system there must be only one system and everybody in the world must work on it!! Duplicate products cause more harm than good and hence division of resources must be strongly discouraged. This already happened in case of commercial database systems like Oracle, Sybase, Informix and MS SQL server which caused splintering of user base and often they are incompatible. WARNING: It is possible to create infinite number of database systems for a given specification like ANSI SQL!! MySQL is at 5. Where to get it ? You can buy Redhat Linux CDROM, Debian Linux CDROM or Slackware Linux CDROM which already contains the PostgreSQL in package form (both source code and binaries) from : · Linux System Labs Web site: (7 U.S. dollars) · Cheap Bytes Inc Web site: (7 U.S. dollars) · Debian Main Web site : PostgreSQL organisation is also selling 'PostgreSQL CDROM' which contains the complete source code and binaries for many Unix operating systems as well as full documentation. · PostgreSQL CDROM from main Web site at : 30 (U.S. dollars) Binaries only distribution of PostgreSQL: · The maintainer of PostgreSQL RPMs is Lamar Owen and is at lamar.owen@wgcr.org · PostgreSQL source RPM and binaries RPM · PostgreSQL source RPM and binaries RPM Click on "Latest News" and click on Redhat RPMs. · PostgreSQL source RPM and binaries RPM and ftp site is at · Binaries site for Solaris, HPUX, AIX, IRIX, Linux : WWW Web sites: · Primary Web site: · Secondary Web site: · · · · The ftp sites are listed below :- · Primary FTP: · Secondary FTP: · · · · · · · · · · PostgreSQL source code is also available at all the mirror sites of sunsite unc (total of about 1000 sites around the globe). It is inside the Red Hat Linux distribution in /pub/contrib/i386/postgresql.rpm file. · For list of mirror sites go to 6. PostgreSQL Quick-Installation Instructions This chapter will help you to install and run the database very quickly in less than 5 minutes. 6.1. Install and Test Quick Steps to Install, Test, Verify and run PostgreSQL Login as root. ______________________________________________________________________ # cd /mnt/cdrom/RedHat/RPMS # man rpm # ls postgre*.rpm # rpm -qpl postgre*.rpm | less (to see list of files) # rpm -qpi postgre*.rpm (to see info of package) # cat /etc/passwd | grep postgres ______________________________________________________________________ Note: If you see a 'postgres' user, you may need to backup and clean up the postgres home directory postgres and delete the unix user 'postgres' or rename the unix user 'postgres' to something like 'post­ gres2'. Install must be "clean slate" ______________________________________________________________________ # rpm -i postgre*.rpm (Must install all packages clients, devel, data and main for pgaccess to work ) # man chkconfig # chkconfig --add postgresql (to start pg during booting) # /etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql start (to start up postgres) # man xhost # xhost + (To give display access for pgaccess) # su - postgres bash$ man createdb bash$ createdb mydatabase bash$ man psql bash$ psql mydatabase ..... in psql press up/down arrow keys for history line editing or \s bash$ export DISPLAY=:0.0 bash$ man pgaccess bash$ pgaccess mydatabase ______________________________________________________________________ Now you can start rapidly BANGING away SQL commands at psql or pgac­ cess !! ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ cd /usr/doc/postgresql* ______________________________________________________________________ Here read all the FAQs, User, Programmer, Admin guides and tutorials. 6.2. PostgreSQL RPMs See also "Installation Steps" from The maintainer of PostgreSQL RPMs is Lamar Owen and is at lamar.owen@wgcr.org More details about PostgreSQL is at 6.3. Maximum RPM Familiarize with RedHat RPM package manager to manage the PostgreSQL installations. Download the 'Maximum RPM' textbook from look for the filename maximum-rpm.ps.gz And read it on linux using the gv command - ______________________________________________________________________ # gv maximum-rpm.ps.gz ______________________________________________________________________ There is also rpm2deb which converts the RPM packages to Debian linux packages. 6.4. Examples RPM Examples are needed to do testing of various interfaces to PostgreSQL. Install the postgresql examples directory from - · Linux cdrom - postgresql-*examples.rpm · postgresql-*examples.rpm from or · PostgreSQL source code tree postgresql*.src.rpm and look for examples, testing or tutorial directories 6.5. Testing PyGreSQL - Python interface Install examples package, see ``'' and then do - ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ cd /usr/lib/pgsql/python bash$ createdb thilo bash$ psql thilo thilo=> create table test (aa char(30), bb char(30) ); bash$ /usr/bin/python >>> import _pg >>> db = _pg.connect('thilo', 'localhost') >>> db.query("INSERT INTO test VALUES ('ping', 'pong')") >>> db.query("SELECT * FROM test") eins|zwei ----+---- ping|pong (1 row) >>>CTRL+D bash$ ..... Seems to work - now install it properly bash$ su - root # cp /usr/lib/pgsql/python/_pg.so /usr/lib/python1.5/lib-dynload ______________________________________________________________________ 6.6. Testing Perl - Perl interface Install examples package, see ``'' and then do - ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ cd /usr/doc/postgresql-6.5.3/examples/perl5 bash$ perl ./example.pl ______________________________________________________________________ Note: If the above command does not work then do this. Gloabl var @INC should include the Pg.pm module in directory site_perl hence use -I option below ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ perl -I/usr/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/i386-linux-thread ./example.pl ______________________________________________________________________ .... You ran the perl which is accessing PostgreSQL database!! Read the example.pl file for using perl interface. 6.7. Testing libpq, libpq++ interfaces Install examples package, see ``'' and then do - ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ su root --> to change ownership of examples # chown -R postgres /usr/doc/postgresql-6.5.3/examples # exit bash$ cd /usr/doc/postgresql-6.5.3/examples/libpq bash$ gcc testlibpq.c -I/usr/include/pgsql -lpq bash$ export PATH=$PATH:. bash$ a.out bash$ cd /usr/doc/postgresql-6.5.3/examples/libpq++ bash$ g++ testlibpq0.cc -I/usr/include/pgsql -I/usr/include/pgsql/libpq++ -lpq++ -lpq -lcrypt bash$ ./a.out (Note: Ignore Error messages if you get any - as below) > create table foo (aa int, bb char(4)); No tuples returned... status = 1 Error returned: fe_setauthsvc: invalid name: , ignoring... > insert into foo values ('4535', 'vasu'); No tuples returned... status = 1 Error returned: fe_setauthsvc: invalid name: , ignoring... > select * from foo; aa |bb | -----|-----| 4535 |vasu | Query returned 1 row. > >CTRL+D bash$ ______________________________________________________________________ .... You ran direct C/C++ interfaces to PostgreSQL database!! 6.8. Testing Java interfaces Install examples package, see ``'' and also install the following - · Get JDK jdk-*glibc*.rpm from or from · Get postgresql-jdbc-*.rpm ___________________________________________________________________ bash$ cd /usr/doc/postgresql-6.5.3/examples/jdbc bash$ echo $CLASSPATH --> Should show CLASSPATH=/usr/lib/jdk-x.x.x/lib/classes.zip where x.x.x is proper version numbers. bash$ export CLASSPATH=$CLASSPATH:.:/usr/lib/pgsql/jdbc6.5-1.2.jar Edit all psql.java file and comment out the 'package' line. bash$ javac psql.java bash$ java psql jdbc:postgresql:template1 postgres < password>[1] select * from pg_tables; tablename tableowner hasindexes hasrules pg_type postgres true false false pg_attribute postgres true false false [2] CTRL+C bash$ ___________________________________________________________________ .... You ran direct Java interfaces to PostgreSQL database! 6.9. Testing ecpg interfaces Install examples package, see ``'' and then do - ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ cd /usr/doc/postgresql-6.5.3/examples/ecpg bash$ ecpg test1.pgc -I/usr/include/pgsql bash$ cc test1.c -I/usr/include/pgsql -lecpg -lpq -lcrypt bash$ createdb mm bash$ ./a.out ______________________________________________________________________ .... You ran Embedded "C"-SQL to PostgreSQL database! 6.10. Testing SQL examples - User defined types and functions Install examples package, see ``'' and then do - ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ cd /usr/doc/postgresql-6.5.3/examples/sql Under-development.. ______________________________________________________________________ 6.11. Testing Tcl/Tk interfaces Example of Tcl/Tk interfaces is pgaccess program. Read the file /usr/bin/pgaccess using a editor - ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ view /usr/bin/pgaccess bash$ export DISPLAY=:0.0 bash$ createdb mydb bash$ pgaccess mydb ______________________________________________________________________ 6.12. Testing ODBC interfaces 1. Get the win32 pgsql odbc driver from 2. See also /usr/lib/libpsqlodbc.a 6.13. Testing MPSQL Motif-worksheet interfaces Get the RPMs from 6.14. Verification To verify the top quality of PostgreSQL, run the Regression test package :- Login as root - ______________________________________________________________________ # rpm -i postgresql*test.rpm And see README file or install the source code tree which has regress directory # rpm -i postgresql*.src.rpm # cd /usr/src/redhat/SPECS # more postgresql*.spec (to see what system RPM packages you need to install) # rpm -bp postgresql*.spec (.. this will prep the package) Regression test needs the Makefiles and some header files like *fmgr*.h which can be built by - # rpm --short-circuit -bc postgresql*.spec ( .. use short circuit to bypass!) Abort the build by CTRL+C, when you see 'make -C common SUBSYS.o' By this time configure is successful and all makefiles and headers are created. You do not need to proceed any further # cd /usr/src/redhat/BUILD # chown -R postgres postgresql* # su - postgres bash$ cd /usr/src/redhat/BUILD/postgresql-6.5.3/src/test/regress bash$ more README bash$ make clean; make all runtest bash$ more regress.out ______________________________________________________________________ 6.15. Emergency Bug fixes Sometimes emergency bug fix patches are released after the GA release of PostgreSQL. You can apply these optional patches depending upon the needs of your application. Follow these steps to apply the patches - Change directory to postgresql source directory # rpm -i postgresql*.src.rpm # cd /usr/src/postgresql6.5.3 # man patch # patch -p0 < patchfile # make clean # make The patch files are located in · PostgreSQL patches : 7. Quick Start Guide Refer also to ``Quick Installation'' chapter. 7.1. Creating, Dropping, Renaming Database You can use the user friendly GUI called 'pgaccess' to create and drop databases, or you can use the command line 'psql' utility. ______________________________________________________________________ If you are logged in as root, switch user to 'postgres' : # xhost + (To give display access for pgaccess) # su - postgres bash$ man createdb bash$ createdb mydatabase bash$ man psql bash$ psql mydatabase ..... in psql press up/down arrow keys for history line editing or \s bash$ export DISPLAY=:0.0 bash$ man pgaccess bash$ pgaccess mydatabase ______________________________________________________________________ Now you can start rapidly BANGING away SQL commands at psql or pgac­ cess !! To drop the database do : ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man dropdb bash$ dropdb ______________________________________________________________________ It is also possible to destroy a database from within an SQL session by using: ______________________________________________________________________ > drop database ______________________________________________________________________ To rename a database see ``Backup and Restore'' 7.2. Creating, Dropping users To create new users, login as unix user 'postgres'. You can use user friendly GUI tool called 'pgacess' to create, drop users. ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man pgaccess bash$ pgaccess ______________________________________________________________________ and click on "Users" tab and then click Object|New or Object|Delete You can also use command line scripts. Use the shell script called 'createuser' which invokes psql ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man createuser bash$ createuser bash$ createuser -h host -p port -i userid ______________________________________________________________________ To drop a postgres user, use shell script 'destroyuser' - ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man destroyuser bash$ destroyuser ______________________________________________________________________ 7.3. Creating, Dropping Groups Currently, there is no easy interface to set up user groups. You have to explicitly insert/update the pg_group table. For example: ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ su - postgres bash$ psql ..... in psql press up/down arrow keys for history line editing or \s psql=> insert into pg_group (groname, grosysid, grolist) psql=> values ('posthackers', '1234', '{5443, 8261}' ); INSERT 58224 psql=> grant insert on foo to group posthackers; CHANGE psql=> ______________________________________________________________________ The fields in pg_group are: groname The group name. This name should be purely alphanumeric; do not include underscores or other punctua­ tion. grosysid The group id. This is an int4, and should be unique for each group. grolist The list of pg_user IDs that belong in the group. This is an int4[]. To drop the group: ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ su - postgres bash$ psql ..... in psql press up/down arrow keys for history line editing or \s psql=> delete from pg_group where groname = 'posthackers'; ______________________________________________________________________ 7.4. Create, Edit, Drop a table You can use user friendly GUI tool 'pgaccess' or command line tool 'psql' to create, edit or drop a table in a database. ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man pgaccess bash$ pgaccess ______________________________________________________________________ Click on Table | New | Design buttons. ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man psql bash$ psql ..... in psql press up/down arrow keys for history line editing or \s ______________________________________________________________________ At psql prompt, give standard SQL statements like 'create table', 'alter table' or 'drop table' to manipulate the tables. 7.5. Create, Edit, Drop records in a table You can use user friendly GUI tool 'pgaccess' or command line tool 'psql' to create, edit or drop records in a database table. ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man pgaccess bash$ pgaccess ______________________________________________________________________ Click on Table | < pick a table > | Open buttons. ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man psql bash$ psql ..... in psql press up/down arrow keys for history line editing or \s ______________________________________________________________________ At psql prompt, give standard SQL statements like 'insert into table_name', 'update table_name' or 'delete from table_name' to manip­ ulate the tables. 7.6. Switch active Database You can use user friendly GUI tool 'pgaccess' or command line tool 'psql' to switch active database. ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man pgaccess bash$ pgaccess ______________________________________________________________________ Click on Database | Open buttons. ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man psql bash$ psql ..... in psql press up/down arrow keys for history line editing or \s psql=> connect ______________________________________________________________________ 7.7. Backup and Restore database PostgreSQL provides two utilities to back up your system: pg_dump to backup individual databases, and pg_dumpall to back up all the databases in just one step. ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ su - postgres bash$ man pd_dump bash$ pd_dump > database_name.pgdump ______________________________________________________________________ and can be restored using: ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ cat database_name.pgdump | psql ______________________________________________________________________ This technique can be used to move databases to new locations, and to rename existing databases. WARNING: Every database should be backed up on a regular basis. Since PostgreSQL manages its own files in the file sysetem, it is not advisable to rely on system backups of your file system for your database backups; there is no guarantee that the files will be in a usable, consistent state after restoration. BACKUP LARGE DATABASES: Since Postgres allows tables larger than the maximum file size on your system, it can be problematic to dump the table to a file, because the resulting file likely will be larger than the maximum size allowed by your system. As pg_dump writes to stdout, you can just use standard unix tools to work around this possible problem: Use compressed dumps: ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ pg_dump | gzip > filename.dump.gz ______________________________________________________________________ reload with: ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ createdb bash$ gunzip -c filename.dump.gz | psql ______________________________________________________________________ or ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ cat filename.dump.gz | gunzip | psql ______________________________________________________________________ Use split: ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ pg_dump | split -b 1m - filename.dump. ______________________________________________________________________ Note: There is a dot (.) after filename.dump in the above command!! You can reload with: ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man createdb bash$ createdb bash$ cat filename.dump.* | pgsql ______________________________________________________________________ Of course, the name of the file (filename) and the content of the pg_dump output need not match the name of the database. Also, the restored database can have an arbitrary new name, so this mechanism is also suitable for renaming databases. To dump all the databases in PostgreSQL use pg_dumpall ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man pg_dumpall bash$ pg_dumpall -o > db.out To reload: bash$ psql -e template1 < db.out ______________________________________________________________________ 7.8. Security of database See the chapter on ``PostgreSQL Security''. 7.9. Online help It is very important that you should know how to use online help facilities of PostgreSQL, since it will save you lot of time and provides very quick access to information. See the online man pages on various commands like createdb, createuser, etc.. ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man createdb ______________________________________________________________________ See also online help of psql, by typing \h at psql prompt ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ psql mydatabase psql> \h Tip: In psql press up/down arrow keys for history line editing or \s ______________________________________________________________________ 7.10. PostgreSQL Documentation More questions, read the fine manuals of PostgreSQL which are very extensive. PostgreSQL documentation is distributed with package. See the other manuals. 8. PostgreSQL Supports Extremely Large Databases greater than 200 Gig Performance of 32-bit cpu machines will decline rapidly when the database size exceeds 5 GigaByte. You can run 30 gig database on 32-bit cpu but the performance will be degraded. Machines with 32-bit cpu imposes a limitation of 2 GB on RAM, 2 GB on file system sizes and other limitations on the operating system. Use the special filesystems for linux made by SGI, IBM or HP or ext3-fs to support file-sizes greater than 2 GB on 32-bit linux machines. For extremely large databases, it is strongly advised to use 64-bit machines like Digital Alpha cpu, Sun Ultra-sparc 64-bit cpu, Silicon graphics 64-bit cpu, Intel Merced IA-64 cpu, HPUX 64bit machines or IBM 64-bit machines. Compile PostgreSQL under 64-bit cpu and it can support huge databases and large queries. Performance of PostgreSQL for queries on large tables and databases will be several times faster than PostgreSQL on 32-bit cpu machines. Advantage of 64-bit machines are that you get very large memory addressing space and the operating system can support very large file-systems, provide better performance with large databases, support much larger memory (RAM), have more capabilities etc.. 9. How can I trust PostgreSQL ? Regression Test Package builds cus­ tomer confidence Thanks to "Laws of Physics", it is possible to SCIENTIFICALLY verify whether PostgreSQL is working as per ISO/ANSI SQL specifications. To validate PostgreSQL, regression test package (src/test/regress) is included in the distribution. Regression test package will verify the standard SQL operations as well as the extensibility capabilities of PostgreSQL. The test package already contains hundreds of SQL test programs. You should use the computer's high-speed power to validate the PostgreSQL, instead of using human brain power. Computers can carry out software regression tests millions or even billions of times faster than humans can. Modern computers can run billions of SQL tests in a very short time. In the near future the speed of computer will be several zillion times faster than human brain! Hence, it makes sense to use the power of computer to validate the software. You can add more tests just in case you need to, and can upload to the primary PostgreSQL web site if you feel that it will be useful to others on internet. Regression test package helps build customer confidence and trust in PostgreSQL and facilitates rapid deployment of PostgreSQL on production systems. Regression test package can be taken as a "VERY SOLID" technical document mutually agreed upon between the developers and end-users. PostgreSQL developers extensively use the regression test package during development period and also before releasing the software to public to ensure good quality. Capablilities of PostgreSQL are directly reflected by the regression test package. If a functionality, syntax or feature exists in the regression test package then it is supported, and all others which are NOT listed in the package MAY not be supported by PostgreSQL!! You may need to verify those and add it to regression test package. 10. Security of Database Database security is addressed at several levels: · Database file protection. All files stored within the database are protected from reading by any account other than the postgres superuser account · Connections from a client to the database server are, by default, allowed only via a local UNIX socket, not via TCP/IP sockets. The back-end must be started with the -i option to allow nonlocal clients to connect. · Client connections can be restricted by IP address and/or username via the pg_hba.conf file in $PG_DATA. · Client connections may be authenticated via other external packages. · Each user in Postgres is assigned a username and (optionally) a password. By default, users do not have write access to databases they did not create. · Users may be assigned to groups, and table access may be restricted based on group priveleges. 10.1. User Authentication Authentication is the process by which the backend server and postmaster ensure that the user requesting access to data is in fact who he/she claims to be. All users who invoke Postgres are checked against the contents of the pg_user class to ensure that they are authorized to do so. However, verification of the user's actual identity is performed in a variety of ways: · From the user shell: A backend server started from a user shell notes the user's (effective) user-id before performing a setuid to the user-id of user postgres. The effective user-id is used as the basis for access control checks. No other authentication is conducted. · From the network: If the Postgres system is built as distributed, access to the Internet TCP port of the postmaster process is available to anyone. The DBA configures the pg_hba.conf file in the $PGDATA directory to specify what authentication system is to be used according to the host making the connection and which database it is connecting to. See pg_hba.conf(5) (man 5 pg_hba.conf) for a description of the authentication systems available. Of course, host-based authentication is not fool-proof in Unix, either. It is possible for determined intruders to also masquerade the origination host. Those security issues are beyond the scope of Postgres. 10.2. Host-Based Access Control Host-based access control is the name for the basic controls PostgreSQL exercises on what clients are allowed to access a database and how the users on those clients must authenticate themselves. Each database system contains a file named pg_hba.conf, in its $PGDATA directory, which controls who can connect to each database. Every client accessing a database must be covered by one of the entries in pg_hba.conf. Otherwise all attempted connections from that client will be rejected with a "User authentication failed" error message. See online man page of pg_hba.conf(5) (man 5 pg_hba.conf). The general format of the pg_hba.conf file is of a set of records, one per line. Blank lines and lines beginning with a hash character ("#") are ignored. A record is made up of a number of fields which are separated by spaces and/or tabs. Connections from clients can be made using Unix domain sockets or Internet domain sockets (ie. TCP/IP). Connections made using Unix domain sockets are controlled using records of the following format: ______________________________________________________________________ local database authentication method ______________________________________________________________________ where database specifies the database that this record applies to. The value all specifies that it applies to all databases. authentication method specifies the method a user must use to authenticate themselves when connecting to that database using Unix domain sockets. The different methods are described below. Connections made using Internet domain sockets are controlled using records of the following format. ______________________________________________________________________ host database TCP/IP-address TCP/IP-mask authentication method ______________________________________________________________________ The TCP/IP address is logically and'ed to both the specified TCP/IP mask and the TCP/IP address of the connecting client. If the two resulting values are equal then the record is used for this connection. If a connection matches more than one record then the earliest one in the file is used. Both the TCP/IP address and the TCP/IP mask are specified in dotted decimal notation. If a connection fails to match any record then the reject authentication method is applied (see ``Authentication Methods''). 10.3. Authentication Methods The following authentication methods are supported for both Unix and TCP/IP domain sockets: · trust The connection is allowed unconditionally. · reject The connection is rejected unconditionally. · crypt The client is asked for a password for the user. This is sent encrypted (using crypt(3)) and compared against the password held in the pg_shadow table. If the passwords match, the connection is allowed. · password The client is asked for a password for the user. This is sent in clear and compared against the password held in the pg_shadow table. If the passwords match, the connection is allowed. An optional password file may be specified after the password keyword which is used to match the supplied password rather than the pg_shadow table. See pg_passwd. The following authentication methods are supported for TCP/IP domain sockets only: · krb4 Kerberos V4 is used to authenticate the user. · krb5 Kerberos V5 is used to authenticate the user. · ident The ident server on the client is used to authenticate the user (RFC 1413). An optional map name may be specified after the ident keyword which allows ident user names to be mapped onto Postgres user names. Maps are held in the file $PGDATA/pg_ident.conf. Here are some examples: ______________________________________________________________________ # Trust any connection via Unix domain sockets. local trust # Trust any connection via TCP/IP from this machine. host all 127.0.0.1 255.255.255.255 trust # We don't like this machine. host all 192.168.0.10 255.255.255.0 reject # This machine can't encrypt so we ask for passwords in clear. host all 192.168.0.3 255.255.255.0 password # The rest of this group of machines should provide encrypted passwords. host all 192.168.0.0 255.255.255.0 crypt ______________________________________________________________________ 10.4. Access Control Postgres provides mechanisms to allow users to limit the access to their data that is provided to other users. · Database superusers Database super-users (i.e., users who have pg_user.usesuper set) silently bypass all of the access controls described below with two exceptions: manual system catalog updates are not permitted if the user does not have pg_user.usecatupd set, and destruction of system catalogs (or modification of their schemas) is never allowed. · Access Privilege The use of access privilege to limit reading, writing and setting of rules on classes is covered in SQL grant/revoke(l). · Class removal and schema modification Commands that destroy or modify the structure of an existing class, such as alter, drop table, and drop index, only operate for the owner of the class. As mentioned above, these operations are never permitted on system catalogs. 10.5. Secure TCP/IP Connection via SSH You can use ssh to encrypt the network connection between clients and a Postgres server. Done properly, this should lead to an adequately secure network connection. The documentation for ssh provides most of the information to get started. Please refer to for better insight. A step-by-step explanation can be done in just two steps. Running a secure tunnel via ssh: A step-by-step explanation can be done in just two steps. · Establish a tunnel to the back-end machine, like this: ___________________________________________________________________ ssh -L 3333:wit.mcs.anl.gov:5432 postgres@wit.mcs.anl.gov ___________________________________________________________________ · The first number in the -L argument, 3333, is the port number of your end of the tunnel. The second number, 5432, is the remote end of the tunnel -- the port number your backend is using. The name or the address in between the port numbers belongs to the server machine, as does the last argument to ssh that also includes the optional user name. Without the user name, ssh will try the name you are currently logged on as on the client machine. You can use any user name the server machine will accept, not necessarily those related to postgres. · Now that you have a running ssh session, you can connect a postgres client to your local host at the port number you specified in the previous step. If it's psql, you will need another shell because the shell session you used in step 1 is now occupied with ssh. ___________________________________________________________________ psql -h localhost -p 3333 -d mpw ___________________________________________________________________ · Note that you have to specify the -h argument to cause your client to use the TCP socket instead of the Unix socket. You can omit the port argument if you chose 5432 as your end of the tunnel. 10.6. Kerberos Authentication Kerberos is an industry-standard secure authentication system suitable for distributed computing over a public network. Availability: The Kerberos authentication system is not distributed with Postgres. Versions of Kerberos are typically available as optional software from operating system vendors. In addition, a source code distribution may be obtained through MIT Project Athena. ______________________________________________________________________ Note: You may wish to obtain the MIT version even if your vendor provides a version, since some vendor ports have been deliberately crippled or rendered non-interoperable with the MIT version. ______________________________________________________________________ Inquiries regarding your Kerberos should be directed to your vendor or MIT Project Athena. Note that FAQLs (Frequently-Asked Questions Lists) are periodically posted to the Kerberos mailing list (send mail to subscribe), and USENET news group. Installation: Installation of Kerberos itself is covered in detail in the Kerberos Installation Notes . Make sure that the server key file (the srvtab or keytab) is somehow readable by the Postgres account. Postgres and its clients can be compiled to use either Version 4 or Version 5 of the MIT Kerberos protocols by setting the KRBVERS variable in the file src/Makefile.global to the appropriate value. You can also change the location where Postgres expects to find the associated libraries, header files and its own server key file. After compilation is complete, Postgres must be registered as a Kerberos service. See the Kerberos Operations Notes and related manual pages for more details on registering services. Operation: After initial installation, Postgres should operate in all ways as a normal Kerberos service. For details on the use of authentication, see the PostgreSQL User's Guide reference sections for postmaster and psql. In the Kerberos Version 5 hooks, the following assumptions are made about user and service naming(also, see Table below): · User principal names (anames) are assumed to contain the actual Unix/Postgres user name in the first component. · The Postgres service is assumed to be have two components, the service name and a hostname, canonicalized as in Version 4 (i.e., with all domain suffixes removed). ______________________________________________________________________ Table: Kerberos Parameter Examples ------------------------------------------------------ Parameter Example ------------------------------------------------------ user frew@S2K.ORG user aoki/HOST=miyu.S2K.Berkeley.EDU@S2K.ORG host postgres_dbms/ucbvax@S2K.ORG ------------------------------------------------------ ______________________________________________________________________ 11. GUI FrontEnd Tool for PostgreSQL (Graphical User Interface) Web browser will be the most popular GUI front-end in the future. It is recommended that you migrate all of your "legacy" Windows 95/NT applications to Web-based application. You should use Web-Application Servers like ``'' (Java based) or ``'' (Python based). Best web-scripting (and compiling) language is ``PHP+Zend compiler'' PHP is extremely powerful as it combines the power of Perl, Java, C++, Javascript into one single language and it runs on all OSes - unixes and Windows NT/95. The best tools in the order of preference are - · Enhydra at ``'' plus Borland Java JBuilder for Linux · Zope at ``'' · PHP script and Zend compiler at ``PHP+Zend compiler'' · X-Designer supports C++, Java and MFC · Qt for Windows95 and Unix at and · Code Crusader is on linux cdrom, freeware based on MetroWorks Code Warrior · Code Warrior from MetroWorks · GNU Prof C++ IDE from (Redhat) Cygnus · Borland C++ Builder for Linux · Borland Java JBuilder for Linux Language choices in the order of preference are - 1. Java but its programs run very slow and has license fees. C++ is 5 times faster than Java!! 2. Python (Powerful object oriented scripting language). 3. PHP Web server scripting, HTML, DHTML with Javascrpt client scripting and Java-Applets. 4. Perl scripting language using Perl-Qt or Perl-Tk ``'' 5. Omnipresent and Omnipotent language C++ (GNU g++): · Fast CGI(written in GNU C++) with Javascript/Java-Applets as Web- GUI-frontend. · GNU C++ and QtEZ or QT · GNU C++ with Lesstiff or Motif. There are other tools available - PostgreSQL has Tcl/Tk interface library in the distribution called 'pgTcl'. There is a IDE (integrated development environment) for Tcl/Tk called SpecTcl. · Lesstiff Motif tool · Vibe Java/C++ is at · JccWarrior · Tcl/Tk · Object oriented extension of Tcl called INCR at · Visual TCL site · Visual TCL Redhat rpm at · · · · Java FreeBuilder · SpecTCL · Java RAD Tool for PostgreSQL Kanchenjunga · Applixware Tool · XWPE X Windows Programming Environment or at · XWB X Windows Work Bench · NEdit You can also use Borland C++ Builder, Delphi, Borland JBuilder, PowerBuilder on Windows95 connecting to PostgreSQL on unix box through ODBC/JDBC drivers. 12. Interface Drivers for PostgreSQL 12.1. ODBC Drivers for PostgreSQL ODBC stands for 'Open DataBase Connectivity' established by Microsoft, is a popular standard for accessing information from various databases from different vendors. Applications written using the ODBC drivers are guaranteed to work with various databases like PostgreSQL, Oracle, Sybase, Informix etc.. · PostODBC is already included in the distribution. See main web site . It is included on the PostgreSQL CDROM. · Open source code ODBC project is at · Open Link Software Corporation is selling ODBC for PostgreSQL and other databases. Open Link also is giving away free ODBC (limited seats) check them out. · Insight ODBC for PostgreSQL This is the official PostODBC site. · FreeODBC package This is a free of cost version of ODBC. 12.2. UDBC Drivers for PostgreSQL UDBC is a static version of ODBC independent of driver managers and DLL support, used to embed database connectivity support directly into applications. · Open Link Software Corporation is selling UDBC for PostgreSQL and other databases. Open Link also is giving away free UDBC (limited seats) check them out. 12.3. JDBC Drivers for PostgreSQL JDBC stands for 'Java DataBase Connectivity'. Java is a platform independent programming language developed by Sun Microsystems. Java programmers are encouraged to write database applications using the JDBC to facilitate portability across databases like PostgreSQL, Oracle, informix, etc. If you write Java applications you can get JDBC drivers for PostgreSQL from the following sites: JDBC driver is already included in the PostgreSQL distribution in postgresql-jdbc*.rpm. · Sun's Java connectivity to PostgreSQL · · Open Link Software Corporation is selling JDBC for PostgreSQL and other databases. Open Link also is giving away free JDBC (limited seats) check them out. · JDBC UK site · JDBC FAQ site The JDBC home, guide and FAQ are located at - · JDBC HOME · JDBC guide · JDBC FAQ See the section - ``Testing Java PostgreSQL interface'' 12.4. Java for PostgreSQL Java programmers can find these for PostgreSQL very useful. · and see postgresql- jdbc-*.rpm · See the section - ``Testing Java PostgreSQL interface'' 13. Perl Database Interface (DBI) Driver for PostgreSQL 13.1. Perl 5 interface for PostgreSQL PERL is an acronym for 'Practical Extraction and Report Language'. Perl is available on each and every operating system and hardware platform in the world. You can use Perl on Windows95/NT, Apple Macintosh iMac, all flavors of Unix (Solaris, HPUX, AIX, Linux, Irix, SCO etc..), mainframe MVS, desktop OS/2, OS/400, Amdahl UTS and many others. Perl runs EVEN on many unpopular or generally-unknown operating systems and hardware!! So do not be surprised if you see perl running on a very rarely used operating system. You can imagine the vast extent of the user base and developer base of Perl. Perl interface for PostgreSQL is included in the distribution of PostgreSQL. Check in src/pgsql_perl5 directory. · Pgsql_perl5 contact Email: E.Mergl@bawue.de · Another source from - · Perl Home page : · Perl tutorial, look for Tutorial title at : · Perl FAQ is at : · Perl GUI User Interfaces Perl-Qt rpm : and look for PerlQt-1.06-1.i386.rpm · Perl GUI User Interfaces Perl-Qt : · Perl GUI User Interfaces Perl-XForms : and look for Xforms4Perl-0.8.4-1.i386.rpm · Perl GUI User Interfaces Perl-Tk : · Perl GUI kits : · Perl Database Interfaces : · Perl to "C" translator : and look for Compiler-a3.tar.gz · Bourne shell to Perl translator : · awk to Perl a2p and sed to Perl s2p is included with the PERl distribution. · See also the newsgroups for PERL at comp.lang.perl.* 13.2. Perl Database Interface DBI 13.2.1. WHAT IS DBI ? The Perl Database Interface (DBI) is a database access Application Programming Interface (API) for the Perl Language. The Perl DBI API specification defines a set of functions, variables and conventions that provide a consistent database interface independent of the actual database being used. · DBI FAQ author Descartes Hermetica is at descarte@hermetica.com 13.2.2. DBI driver for PostgreSQL DBD-Pg-0.89 Get DBD-Pg-0.89.tar.gz from below · DBD-Pg-0.89 : · Comprehensive Perl Archive Network CPAN · DBI drivers list and DBI module pages · DBI information is at · Primary ftp site · Miscellaneous DBI link · Miscellaneous DBI link · Miscellaneous DBI link · PostgreSQL database 13.2.3. Technical support for DBI · Send comments and bug-reports to and include the output of perl -v, and perl -V, the version of PostgreSQL, the version of DBD-Pg, and the version of DBI in your bug-report. E.Mergl@bawue.de 13.2.4. What is DBI, DBperl, Oraperl and *perl? To quote Tim Bunce, the architect and author of DBI: ``DBI is a database access Application Programming Interface (API) for the Perl Language. The DBI API Specification defines a set of functions, variables and conventions that provide a consistent database interface independent of the actual database being used.'' In simple language, the DBI interface allows users to access multiple database types transparently. So, if you connecting to an Oracle, Informix, mSQL, Sybase or whatever database, you don't need to know the underlying mechanics of the 3GL layer. The API defined by DBI will work on all these database types. A similar benefit is gained by the ability to connect to two different databases of different vendor within the one perl script, ie, I want to read data from an Oracle database and insert it back into an Informix database all within one program. The DBI layer allows you to do this simply and powerfully. Here's a list of DBperl modules, their corresponding DBI counterparts and support information. DBI driver queries should be directed to the dbi-users mailing list. Module Name Database Required Author DBI ----------- ----------------- ------ --- Sybperl Sybase Michael Peppler DBD::Sybase http://www.mbay.net/~mpeppler Oraperl Oracle 6 & 7 Kevin Stock DBD::Oracle Ingperl Ingres Tim Bunce & DBD::Ingres Ted Lemon Interperl Interbase Buzz Moschetti DBD::Interbase Uniperl Unify 5.0 Rick Wargo None Pgperl Postgres Igor Metz DBD::Pg Btreeperl NDBM John Conover SDBM? Ctreeperl C-Tree John Conover None Cisamperl Informix C-ISAM Mathias Koerber None Duaperl X.500 Directory Eric Douglas None User Agent However, some DBI modules have DBperl emulation layers, so, DBD::Ora­ cle comes with an Oraperl emulation layer, which allows you to run legacy oraperl scripts without modification. The emulation layer translates the oraperl API calls into DBI calls and executes them through the DBI switch. 13.2.5. DBI specifications There are a few information sources on DBI. · DBI Specification POD documentation PODs are chunks of documentation usually embedded within perl programs that document the code ``in place'', providing a useful resource for programmers and users of modules. POD for DBI and drivers is beginning to become more commonplace, and documentation for these modules can be read with the following commands. ______________________________________________________________________ The POD for the DBI Specification can be read with the command $ perldoc DBI Users of the Oraperl emulation layer bundled with DBD::Oracle, may read up on how to program with the Oraperl interface by typing: $ perldoc Oraperl Users of the DBD::mSQL module may read about some of the private functions and quirks of that driver by typing: $ perldoc DBD::mSQL The Frequently Asked Questions is also available as POD documentation. Read this by typing: $ perldoc DBI::FAQ POD in general - Information on writing POD, and on the philosophy of POD in general, can be read by typing: $ perldoc perlpod ______________________________________________________________________ Users with the Tk module installed may be interested to learn there is a Tk-based POD reader available called tkpod, which formats POD in a convenient and readable way. See also - · Information from DBI mailing lists · DBI Perl Journal website · ``DBperl'' This article, published in the November 1996 edition of ``Dr. Dobbs Journal''. · ``The Perl5 Database Interface'' a book to be written by Alligator Descartes and published by O'Reilly and Associates. The mailing lists that users may participate in are: · Mailing lists · dbi-announce Email: dbi-announce-request@fugue.com with a message body of 'subscribe' · dbi-dev For developers Email: dbi-dev-request@fugue.com with a message body of 'subscribe' · dbi-users general discussion Email: dbi-users-request@fugue.com with a message body of 'subscribe' · US Mailing List Archives · European Mailing List Archives 13.2.6. Compilation problems or "It fails the test" If you have a core dump, try the Devel::CoreStack module for generating a stack trace from the core dump. Devel::CoreStack can be found on CPAN at: · Email the dbi-users Mailing List stack trace, module versions, perl version, test cases, operating system versions and any other pertinent information. The more information you send, the quicker developers can track problems down. 13.2.7. Is DBI supported under Windows 95 / NT platforms? The DBI and DBD::Oracle Win32 ports are now a standard part of DBI, so, downloading DBI of version higher than 0.81 should work fine. You can access Microsoft Access and SQL-Server databases from DBI via ODBC. Supplied with DBI-0.79 (and later) is an experimental DBI 'emulation layer' for the Win32::ODBC module. It's called DBI::W32ODBC. You will need the Win32::ODBC module. · Win32 DBI · Win32 ODBC 13.2.8. Is DBI any use for CGI programming? In a word, yes! DBI is hugely useful for CGI programming! In fact, CGI programming is one of two top uses for DBI. DBI confers the ability to CGI programmers to power WWW-fronted databases to their users, which provides users with vast quantities of ordered data to play with. DBI also provides the possibility that, if a site is receiving far too much traffic than their database server can cope with, they can upgrade the database server behind the scenes with no alterations to the CGI scripts. 13.2.9. How do I get faster connection times with DBD Oracle and CGI? The Apache httpd maintains a pool of httpd children to service client requests. Using the Apache mod_perl module by Doug MacEachern, the perl interpreter is embedded with the httpd children. The CGI, DBI, and your other favorite modules can be loaded at the startup of each child. These modules will not be reloaded unless changed on disk. For more information on Apache, see the Apache Project's WWW site: · Apache Project WWW site · Mod_perl module 13.2.10. How do I get persistent connections with DBI and CGI? Using Edmund Mergl's Apache::DBI module, database logins are stored in a hash with each of these httpd child. If your application is based on a single database user, this connection can be started with each child. Currently, database connections cannot be shared between httpd children. Apache::DBI can be downloaded from CPAN via: · 13.2.11. ``When I run a perl script from the command line, it works, but, when I run it under the httpd, it fails!'' Why? Basically, a good chance this is occurring is due to the fact that the user that you ran it from the command line as has a correctly configured set of environment variables, in the case of DBD::Oracle, variables like $ORACLE_HOME, $ORACLE_SID or TWO_TASK. The httpd process usually runs under the user id of nobody, which implies there is no configured environment. Any scripts attempting to execute in this situation will correctly fail. To solve this problem, set the environment for your database in a BEGIN ( ) block at the top of your script. This will solve the problem. Similarly, you should check your httpd error logfile for any clues, as well as the ``Idiot's Guide To Solving Perl / CGI Problems'' and ``Perl CGI Programming FAQ'' for further information. It is unlikely the problem is DBI-related. Read BOTH these documents carefully! · Guide to Solving Perl CGI problems 13.2.12. Multi-threading with DBI? For some OCI example code for Oracle that has multi-threaded SELECT statements, see: · 13.2.13. How can I invoke stored procedures with DBI? Assuming that you have created a stored procedure within the target database, eg, an Oracle database, you can use $dbh->do to immediately execute the procedure. For example, $dbh->do( "BEGIN someProcedure END" ); 13.2.14. How can I get return values from stored procedures with DBI? Remember to perform error checking, though! $sth = $dbh->prepare( "BEGIN foo(:1, :2, :3); END;" ); $sth->bind_param(1, $a); $sth->bind_param_inout(2, \$path, 2000); $sth->bind_param_inout(3, \$success, 2000); $sth->execute; 13.2.15. How can I create or drop a database with DBI? Database creation and deletion are concepts that are entirely too abstract to be adequately supported by DBI. For example, Oracle does not support the concept of dropping a database at all! Also, in Oracle, the database server essentially is the database, whereas in mSQL, the server process runs happily without any databases created in it. The problem is too disparate to attack. Some drivers, therefore, support database creation and deletion through the private func methods. You should check the documentation for the drivers you are using to see if they support this mechanism. 13.2.16. How are NULL values handled by DBI? NULL values in DBI are specified to be treated as the value undef. NULLs can be inserted into databases as NULL, for example: $rv = $dbh->do( "INSERT INTO table VALUES( NULL )" ); but when queried back, the NULLs should be tested against undef. This is standard across all drivers. 13.2.17. What are these func methods all about? The func method is defined within DBI as being an entry point for database-specific functionality, eg, the ability to create or drop databases. Invoking these driver-specific methods is simple, for example, to invoke a createDatabase method that has one argument, we would write: $rv = $dbh->func( 'argument', 'createDatabase' ); Software developers should note that the func methods are non-portable between databases. 13.2.18. Commercial Support and Training PERL CLINIC : The Perl Clinic can arrange commercial support contracts for Perl, DBI, DBD::Oracle and Oraperl. Support is provided by the company with whom Tim Bunce, author of DBI, works. For more information on their services, please see : · 13.3. Testing Perl interface See the section - ``Testing Perl PostgreSQL interface'' 14. PostgreSQL Management Tools 14.1. PGACCESS - A GUI Tool for PostgreSQL Management PgAccess is a Tcl/Tk interface to PostgreSQL. It is already included in the distribution of PostgreSQL. You may want to check out this web site for a newer copy · · If you have any comment, suggestion for improvements, e-mail to : teo@flex.ro Usage of pgaccess - ___________________________________________________________________ # man xhost # xhost + # su - postgres bash$ man pgaccess bash$ export DISPLAY=:0.0 bash$ pgaccess mydatabase ___________________________________________________________________ Features of PgAccess PgAccess windows - Main window, Table builder, Table(query) view, Visual query builder. Tables · opening tables for viewing, max 200 records (changed by preferences menu) · column resizing, dragging the vertical grid line (better in table space rather than in the table header) · text wrap in cells - layout saved for every table · import/export to external files (SDF,CSV) · filter capabilities (enter filter like (price>3.14) · sort order capabilities (enter manually the sort field(s)) · editing in place · improved table generator assistant · improved field editing Queries · define , edit and stores "user defined queries" · store queries as views · execution of queries · viewing of select type queries result · query deleting and renaming · Visual query builder with drag & drop capabilities. For any of you who had installed the Tcl/Tk plugin for Netscape Navigator, you can see it at work clicking here Sequences · defines sequences, delete them and inspect them Functions · define, inspect and delete functions in SQL language Future implementation will have · table design (add new fields, renaming, etc.) · function definition · report generator · basic scripting INFORMATION ABOUT LIBGTCL You will need the PostgreSQL to Tcl interface library libgtcl, lined as a Tcl/Tk 'load'-able module. The libpgtcl and the source is located in the PostgreSQL directory /src/interfaces/libpgtcl. Specifically, you will need a libpgtcl library that is 'load'-able from Tcl/Tk. This is technically different from an ordinary PostgreSQL loadable object file, because libpgtcl is a collection of object files. Under Linux, this is called libpgtcl.so. You can download from the above site a version already compiled for Linux i386 systems. Just copy libpgtcl.so into your system library director (/usr/lib). One of the solutions is to remove from the source the line containing load libpgtcl.so and to load pgaccess.tcl not with wish, but with pgwish (or wishpg) that wish that was linked with libpgtcl library. If you get crypt not found during compilation pgaccess source tree then use -lcrypt. 14.2. Windows Interactive Query Tool for PostgreSQL (WISQL or MPSQL) MPSQL provides users with a graphical SQL interface to PostgresSQL. MPSQL is similar to Oracle's SQL Worksheet and Microsoft SQL Server's query tool WISQL. It has nice GUI and has history of commands. Also you can cut and paste and it has other nice features to improve your productivity. · · Email: keidav@whidbey.com · in file tcl_syb/wisql.html · · Email: de@ucolick.org 14.3. Interactive Query Tool (ISQL) for PostgreSQL called PSQL ISQL is for character command line terminals. This is included in the distribution, and is called "psql". Very similar to Sybase ISQL, Oracle SQLplus. At unix prompt give command 'psql' which will put you in psql> prompt. bash# su - postgres bash$ man psql bash$ psql mydatabase Type \h to see help of commands. Very user friendly and easy to use. Can also be accessed from shell scripts. 14.4. MPMGR - A Database Management Tool for PostgresSQL MPMGR will provide a graphical management interface for PostgresSQL. You can find it at · · Email: keidav@mutinybaysoftware.com · · Email: keidav@whidbey.com · in file tcl_syb/wisql.html · WISQL for PostgreSQL · Email: de@ucolick.org 15. CPUs for PostgreSQL The following CPUs (both 64-bit and 32-bit) are available for PostgreSQL. All these CPUs run Linux. · GNU/GPL Freedom 64-bit F-CPU · Russian E2k 64-bit CPU (The world's fastest CPU as of June, 2000 ???!!!) website : Elbrus is now partnered (alliance) with Sun Microsystems of USA · Korean CPU from Samsung 64-bit CPU original from DEC Alpha Alpha-64bit CPU is at Now there is collaboration between Samsumg, Compaq of USA on Alpha CPU · Intel IA 64 · Transmeta crusoe CPU and in near future Transmeta's 64-bit CPU · Sun Ultra-sparc 64-bit CPU · Silicon Graphics MIPS Architecture CPUs · IBM Power PC (motorola) · Seimens Pyramid CPU from Pyramid Technologies · Intel X86 series 32-bit CPUs Pentiums, Celeron etc.. · AMDs X86 series 32-bit CPUs K-6, Athlon etc.. · National's Cyrix X86 series 32-bit CPUs Cyrix etc.. · European Space Agency's ESA-32bit and ESA-64bit CPUs · Other CPUs from other countries ?? Let me know... 16. Setting up multi-boxes PostgreSQL with just one monitor If you do want to spend money on hardware switches than you can use VNC (Virtual Network Computing) Technology from the telecom giant AT & T. VNC is GPLed and is a free software. Using VNC you can run PostgreSQL programs on computers without monitors and display on remote boxes with monitors!! But the boxes must be connected via ethernet Network Interface Cards. VNC is at You can stack up multiple CPU-boxes and connect to just one monitor and use the KVM (Keyboard, Video, Monitor) switch box to select the host. This saves space and avoids a lot of clutter and also eliminates monitor, keyboard and the mouse (saving anywhere from 100 to 500 US dollars per set). Using this switch box, you can stack up many PostgreSQL servers (development, test, production), Web servers, ftp servers, Intranet servers, Mail servers, News servers in a tower shelf. The switch box can be used for controlling Windows 95/NT or OS/2 boxes as well. Please check out these sites: · DataComm Warehouse Inc at 1-800-328-2261. They supply all varieties of computer hardware 4-port Manual KVM switch (PS/2) is about $89.99 Part No. DDS1354 · Network Technologies Inc (120 dollars/PC 8 ports) which lists · Scene Double Inc, England · Cybex corporation · Raritan Inc · RealStar Solutions Inc · Belkin Inc · Better Box Communications Ltd. · Go to nearest hardware store and ask for "Server Switch" also known as "KVM Auto Switches". Search engine yahoo to find more companies with "Server Switches" or "KVM Switches". It is strongly recommended to have a dedicated unix box for each PostgreSQL data-server for better performance. No other application program/processes should run on this box. See the Business section of your local newspapers for local vendors selling only intel box, 13" monochrome monitor (very low cost monitor). Local vendors sell just the hardware without any Microsoft Windows/DOS. You do not need a color monitor for the database server, as you can do remote administration from color PC workstation. You can buy bare-bone computer hardware from online stores. You can get good rates in "Online Auctions" · Online store and auction hall · Online store · Bidding store Get RedHat (or some other distribution of) Linux cdrom from below - · Linux System Labs Web site: 7 (U.S. dollars) · Cheap Bytes Inc Web site: 7 (U.S. dollars) Make sure that the hardware you purchase is supported by Redhat Linux. Check the ftp site of Redhat for recommended hardware like SCSI adapters, video cards before buying. For just $ 600 you will get a powerful intel box with Redhat Linux running PostgreSQL. Use odbc/jdbc/perl/tcl to connect to PostgreSQL from Windows95, OS/2, Unix Motif or web browser (e.g. Redbaron, Opera, Netscape, 20 others). (Web browsers are very fast becoming the standard GUI client). Using KVM switch you can control many cpu boxes by just one monitor and one keyboard! 17. Web-Application-Servers for PostgreSQL Several Web-Application-Servers work with PostgreSQL both open-source and commercial versions. The popular open-source Web-Application- Servers are Enhydra and Zope and commercial Web-Application-Servers are IBM Websphere, BEA Weblogic. 17.1. Lutris Corp "Enhydra" Enhydra supports PostgreSQL database. Enhydra is a immensely popular Java/XML Web-Application-Server created by 'Lutris Corporation'. It is the world's best Java/XML Web-Application server. It supports EJB, Servlets, JSP, JNDI, JDBC, JTA, CORBA, XMLC/Rocks, DODS and internationalization. It is written in 100% pure Java and is available from . Enhydra is a open source code project but is commercially sold and supported by Lutris Corp. Visit You would use Borland Corp's JBuilder along with Enhydra. JBuilder is at See also Enterprise Java HOWTO at 17.2. Zope Python is becoming immensely popular "pure" object-oriented scripting language. Zope is a Web-Application server and provides interfaces to PostgreSQL. Zope is available at Python is at 18. Applications and Tools for PostgreSQL 18.1. PostgreSQL 4GL for web database applications - AppGEN Develop­ ment System AppGEN can be downloaded from · · . AppGEN is a high level fourth generation language and application generator for producing World Wide Web (WWW) based applications. These applications are typically used over the internet or within a corporate intranet. AppGEN applications are implemented as C scripts conforming to the Common Gateway Interface (CGI) standard supported by most Web Servers. To use AppGEN you will need the following :- PostgresSQL, relational database management system A CGI compatible web server such as NCSA's HTTPD An ansi C compiler such as GCC AppGEN consists of the following Unix (Linux) executables :- · defgen, which produces a basic template application from a logical data structure. The applications are capable of adding, updating, deleting and searching for records within the database whilst automatically maintaining referential integrity. · appgen, the AppGEN compiler which compiles the appgen source code into CGI executable C source and HTML formatted documents ready for deployment on a web server. · dbf2sql, a utility fo converting dBase III compatible .dbf files into executable SQL scripts. This enables data stored in most DOS/Windows based database packages to be migrated to a SQL server such as PostgresSQL. · In addition, AppGEN comprises of a collection of HTML documents, GIF files and Java applets which are used at runtime by the system. And of course, like all good software, the full source code is included. The author, Andrew Whaley, can be contacted on · andrew@arthur.smuht.nwest.nhs.uk 18.2. WWW Web interface for PostgresSQL - DBENGINE dbengine a plug 'n play Web interface for PostgreSQL created by Ingo Ciechowski. It is at · About DBENGINE : dbengine is an interface between the WWW and Postgres95 which provides simple access to any existing database within just a few minutes. PHP gives you a Perl like language in your documents, but no real Perl while AppGen and wdb-p95 require that you create some configuration file for each of your databases -- sound's like you'll first of all have to learn some sort of new meta language before you can get started. Unlike other tools you don't have to learn any special programming or scripting language to get started with dbengine. Also there's no configuration file for each database, so you don't have to get familiar with such a new structure. However - in case you want to gain access to the full features of dbengine it'd be a good idea to know the Perl language. The whole system can be configured by simple manipulations of an additional database that contains closer information about how to visualize your database access. You can even specify virtual Fields which are calculated on the fly right before they're displayed on the screen. 18.3. Apache Webserver Module for PostgreSQL - NeoSoft NeoWebScript Apache is a well-known Web Server. And a module to interface PostgreSQL to Apache Webserver is at - · NeoWebScript is a programming language that allows both simple and complex programs to be embedded into HTML files. When an HTML page containing embedded NeoWebScript is requested, the NeoWebScript-enabled webserver executes the embedded script(s), producing a webpage containing customized content created by the program. NeoWebScript is a fast, secure, easy to learn way to do powerful, server-based interactive programming directly in the HTML code in web pages. With NeoWebScript, counters, email forms, graffiti walls, guest books and visitor tracking are all easy, even for a beginning programmer. See how well NeoWebScript holds its' own vs. PERL and JavaScript. If you'd like to install NeoWebScript on your webserver, your Webmaster needs to read our Sysop FAQ to get started. Theory of Operations will explain how NeoWebScript works, while installation will take them through the steps. Management deals with configuration issues and running the server, tests let you verify correct NeoWebScript operation, and troubleshooting deals with server problems. There is no cost to you to use NeoWebScript-2.2 for your ISP, your intranet, or your extranet. You'll see a full license when you register to download, but it costs $ 99 if you want to embed it in your own product or use it in a commerce (eg. SSL) server. NeoWebScript is a module for the Apache webserver that allows you to embed the Tcl/Tk programming language in your webpages as a scripting tool. It was invented by Karl Lehenbauer, NeoSoft's Chief Technical Officer, and documented, enhanced and extended by NeoSoft's programmers and technical writers. The Apache webserver is the world's most popular webserver, accounting for 68 % of the sites polled. Tcl/Tk is the powerful, free, cross-platform scripting language developed by Dr. John Ousterhout. In his own words "Tcl/Tk lets software developers get the job done ten times faster than with toolkits based on C or C++. It's also a great glue language for making existing applications work together and making them more graphical and Internet-aware." Karl Lehenbauer, Founder and Chief Technical Officer of NeoSoft, has been part of Tcl/Tk development from the very beginning. Together with Mark Diehkans, they authored Extended Tcl, also known as TclX or NeoSoft Tcl, a powerful set of extensions to the language. Many of the current core Tcl commands originated in Extended Tcl, and were then imported into the core language by Dr. Ousterhout. NeoSoft Inc., 1770 St. James Place, Suite 500, Houston, TX 77056 USA 18.4. HEITML server side extension of HTML and a 4GL language for PostgreSQL Tool heitml is another way to interface postgres with the world wide web. For more details contact Helmut Emmelmann H.E.I. Informationssyteme GmbH Wimpfenerstrasse 23 Tel. 49-621-795141 68259 Mannheim Germany Fax. 49-621-795161 · E-mail Mr.Helmut Emmelmann at emmel@h-e-i.de · Heitml main web site · Heitml secondary web site heitml is a server side extension of HTML and a 4GL language at the same time. People can write web applications in the HTML style by using new HTML-like tags. heitml (pronounced "Hi"-TML) is an extension of HTML and a full- featured 4th generation language that enables Web-based Applications to interact with data stored in SQL databases, without resorting to complex CGI scripts. heitml extends HTML on the sever side, dynamically converting ".hei" files to HTML format and so is compatible with any web browser.It embraces the familiar, easy-to-use HTML syntax and provides a large assortment of pre-developed Tags and Libraries to take care of tasks that formerly required CGI. As XML, heitml provides user defined tags. With heitml the user defined markup can be translated to HTML and send to a browser. heitml targets both HTML designers and professional programmers alike. HTML designers can use heitml Tags to build dynamic web pages, access SQL databases, or create complete web applications. Counters, registration databases, search forms, email forms, or hierarchical menues can all be created simply by using the pre-developed HTML-like Tags found in the many Component Libraries. For programmers heitml embeds a complete forth generation language in HTML (e.g. , , and Tags), plus powerful expression evaluation with integer, real, boolean, string, and tuple data types. Tuples have reference semantics as in modern object oriented languages and are stored on a heap. heitml variables including all complex data structures stored on the heap maintain their values between pages using the Session Mode. It is pos­ sible to define your own tags or environment tags and even re-define HTML-tags. heitml makes it possible to - - - develop Web Sites in a structured and modular way, drastically reducing maintenance overhead. - - - develop intelligent and interactive Web Sites, with content that dynamically adapts itself to user needs. - - - show the content of SQL databases with no programming other than to use our library of prefined "dba" Tags. - - - develop complex database and Catalog Shopping applications using Session Variables heitml runs on Linux with any Web Server using the CGI interface, and is especially fast (avoiding the CGI overhead) within the APACHE Web Server using the apache API. Currently MSQL (Version 1 and 2), PostgreSQL (Version 6), mysql, and the yard databases are supported). heitml also works on Linux, BSDi, Solaris and SunOS, as well as Windows NT with CGI and ISAPI and ODBC and Windows 95. heitml (on linux) is free for research, non-commercial and private usage. Commercial Web Sites must pay a licensing fee. The fully operational version of heitml is available for a trial period downloaded freely. (Note, however, that each ".hei" Web Page you develop will display a message identifying it as the version for non- commercial use. After registration, you will receive a key to switch off the message without having to re-install the program.) heitml (pronounced "Hi"-TML) significantly extends and enhances the functionality of HTML by definable tags and full programming features. This makes dynamic content and database applications possible simply within the HTML world, without CGI and without external scripting or programming languages. This means you, as an HTML author, can embed applications in your web pages, simply by using some new tags without CGI and without programming. As an advanced user or programmer on the other hand you can create and program powerful tag libraries. This approach makes heitml suitable for HTML newcomers and professional programmers alike. heitml runs on the web server and dynamically generates HTML, so heitml is compatible with the internet standards and with any web browser. It allows full access to databases while shielding the user from any unneccessary CGI complexity. heitml has been developed according to the newst research and in compiler construction and transaction systems. heitml pages are developed just the same way as HTML pages, with a text editor or HTML editor, and placed on the web server as usual. However now pages can contain dynamic heitml tags and access tag libraries. You can use these tags to access the database, to create dynamic content, to send emails, and even to create powerful applications like registration databases and shopping systems. HTML newcomers and professional programmers alike will be amazed at how quickly and easily they can design exciting applications like our Interactive Guestbook without resorting to complex and difficult to learn CGI scripts, simply by using the tools provided in our dba Library. heitml is accompanied by a wide range of tag libraries, to create guestbooks, database maintenance applications, extensible query forms, powerful email forms or structure your web site using a hierarchic menu. These tools are ready to go, just add the corresponding tags to your web site. As an experienced programmer you can make fully use of the heitml persistent dynamic tuple architecture : heitml is not just a scripting language with dynamic typing, full power expression evaluation, recursive procedures and extensive parameter passing features, but it also features persistent dynamic tuples to automatically keep session data of any size. 18.5. America On-line AOL Web server for PostgreSQL The no-cost commercial webserver, AOLserver supports database connections to PostgreSQL for more information see · AOL Web Server home · Introduction to AOLserver by Philip Greenspun AOLserver is a fast, fully multithreaded, Tcl enabled webserver. But not only that, it is a complete database-backed web development platform. With AOLserver you can have multiple pooled connections to PostgreSQL (and other RBDMSs) that can be shared among different threads. AOLserver has a Tcl and C APIs that allow you to develop powerful dynamic websites. All this since 1995. It is licensed under the APL (AOLserver Public License) or the GPL, thus being totally free software. The Tcl API is the most useful for web sites. AOLserver has a set of powerful Tcl calls, such as ns_sendmail (to send e-mail), ns_httpget (to fetch a URL), ns_schedule (a cron-like feature to schedule procedures to run at specific times), etc. You can also extend AOLserver's capabilities very easily with the Tcl API. Each AOLserver virtual server can have its own "library" of private Tcl scripts that are parsed by AOLserver and become accessible to any page within that virtual server. You can develop pages for AOLserver in three ways: - Plain HTML - .tcl pages -- these are tcl programs that can return HTML via the ns_write call. - .adp pages -- AOL Dynamic Pages. You develop your pages in plain HTML but you can scape to Tcl code by using <% %> or <%= %> much alike PHP or ASP. While AOLserver is a great webserver with a superb architecture, where it really shines is in database connectivity. AOLserver has its own database abstraction layer that enables you to have it connected to different RDBMSs without changing your code at all. The connections do the RDBMS are pooled, persistent and are shared among different threads. This allows for very fast connections and efficient use of resources. AOLserver has drivers for all major RDBMSs: PostgreSQL, Oracle, Sybase, Informix, Illustra, Solid, Interbase, MySQL. 18.6. Problem/Project Tracking System Application Tool for PostgreSQL This is at · 18.7. Convert dbase dbf files to PostgreSQL The program dbf2msql works fine with mSQL and PostgreSQL. You can find it at · · This program was written by Maarten Boekhold, Faculty of Electrical Engineering TU Delft, NL Computer Architecture and Digital Technique section · M.Boekhold@et.tudelft.nl You can also use a python method to read dbf files and load into a postgres database. · See 18.8. Convert Microsoft Access MDB database files to PostgreSQL MDB Tools is a planned set of libraries and utilities to facilitate exporting data from MS Access databases (mdb files) into a multiuser database such as Oracle, Sybase, DB2, Informix, MySQL, Postgresql, or similar. · Get MDB tool from · Mailing list 19. Web Database Design/Implementation tool for PostgreSQL - EARP · · in the directory 'pub/unix/earp'. 19.1. What is EARP ? The "Easily Adjustable Response Program" (EARP) created by David Dougherty. EARP is a Web Database Design/Implementation tool, built on top of the PostgreSQL database system. Its functionality includes: · A Visual Design System. · A sendmail interface. (can handle incoming and outgoing mail) · An Enhanced Security Mechanism. · A cgi driver. 19.2. Implementation The main implementation of EARP is a CGI binary which runs under the http daemon to provide access to the database server. All of the design tools are built into the driver, no design takes place over anything but the web. The tools themselves require a graphical browser, the compatibility of objects designed with the tools is implementation independent, based on designing individuals preferences. 19.3. How does it work ? One of the main features of EARP is that it uses an Object Oriented approach to producing html pages which interface to the database. Most pages will consist of several objects. Each object is produced by some sort of tool and given a name, objects are then linked together in a callable sequence by the page tool. Objects are also reusable across multiple pages. Basic tools exist for HTML, Querys, Grabbing input from forms, Extendable Formatting of Query and Input objects, and Linking together of objects into other objects. More advanced tools include the mail tool and the multithreaded query tool. Another feature of EARP is advanced security. Access to various areas of the EARP system can be limited in a variety of ways. To facilitate its advanced security, EARP performs checks for each connection to the system, determining what ids and groups the connecting agent belongs to. Access to areas is defined seperately, and the combination decides if access to a specific area of Earp is allowed. Moreover, all that is required to implement the security features is an http server that supports basic (or better) user authentication. 19.4. Where to get EARP ? EARP is available via anonymous ftp from · in the directory 'pub/unix/earp'. 20. PHP Hypertext Preprocessor - Server-side html-embedded scripting language for PostgreSQL WWW Interface Tool is at - · · PHP also has a compiler called Zend which will vastly improve the performance. First you will write your application in PHP scripting language during development, testing and debugging. Once the project is ready for deployment you will use the Zend compiler to compile the PHP to create executable which will run very fast. Old name is Professional Home Pages (PHP) and new name is PHP Hypertext Pre-Processor · Mirror sites are in many countries like www.COUNTRYCODE.php.net · · · · Questions e-mail to : rasmus@lerdorf.on.ca PHP is a server-side html-embedded scripting language. It lets you write simple scripts right in your .HTML files much like JavaScript does, except, unlike JavaScript PHP is not browser-dependant. JavaScript is a client-side html-embedded language while PHP is a server-side language. PHP is similar in concept to Netscape's LiveWire Pro product. If you like free fast-moving software that comes with full source code you will probably like PHP. · The PostgreSQL support code was written by Adam Sussman asussman@vidya.com 20.1. Major Features · Standard CGI, FastCGI and Apache module support - As a standard CGI program, PHP can be installed on any Unix machine running any Unix web server. With support for the new FastCGI standard, PHP can take advantage of the speed improvements gained through this mechanism. As an Apache module, PHP becomes an extremely powerful and lightning fast alternative to CGI programmimg. · Access Logging - With the access logging capabilities of PHP, users can maintain their own hit counting and logging. It does not use the system's central access log files in any way, and it provides real-time access monitoring. The Log Viewer Script provides a quick summary of the accesses to a set of pages owned by an individual user. In addition to that, the package can be configured to generate a footer on every page which shows access information. See the bottom of this page for an example of this. · Access Control - A built-in web-based configuration screen handles access control configuration. It is possible to create rules for all or some web pages owned by a certain person which place various restrictions on who can view these pages and how they will be viewed. Pages can be password protected, completely restricted, logging disabled and more based on the client's domain, browser, e- mail address or even the referring document. · PostgresSQL Support - Postgres is an advanced free RDBMS. PHP supports embedding PostgreSQL "SQL queries" directly in .html files. · RFC-1867 File Upload Support - File Upload is a new feature in Netscape 2.0. It lets users upload files to a web server. PHP provides the actual Mime decoding to make this work and also provides the additional framework to do something useful with the uploaded file once it has been received. · HTTP-based authentication control - PHP can be used to create customized HTTP-based authentication mechanisms for the Apache web server. · Variables, Arrays, Associative Arrays - PHP supports typed variables, arrays and even Perl-like associative arrays. These can all be passed from one web page to another using either GET or POST method forms. · Conditionals, While Loops - PHP supports a full-featured C-like scripting language. You can have if/then/elseif/else/endif conditions as well as while loops and switch/case statements to guide the logical flow of how the html page should be displayed. · Extended Regular Expressions - Regular expressions are heavily used for pattern matching, pattern substitutions and general string manipulation. PHP supports all common regular expression operations. · Raw HTTP Header Control - The ability to have web pages send customized raw HTTP headers based on some condition is essential for high-level web site design. A frequent use is to send a Location: URL header to redirect the calling client to some other URL. It can also be used to turn off cacheing or manipulate the last update header of pages. · On-the-fly GIF image creation - PHP has support for Thomas Boutell's GD image library which makes it possible to generate GIF images on the fly. · ISP "Safe Mode" support - PHP supports a unique "Safe Mode" which makes it safe to have multiple users run PHP scripts on the same server. · Many more new features are being added in newer releases of PHP. Visit the main web site at · It's Free! - One final essential feature. The package is completely free. It is licensed under the GNU/GPL which allows you to use the software for any purpose, commercial or otherwise. 20.2. PHP - Brief History PHP began life as a simple little cgi wrapper written in Perl. The name of this first package was Personal Home Page Tools, which later became Personal Home Page Construction Kit. A tool was written to easily embed SQL queries into web pages. It was basically another CGI wrapper that parsed SQL queries and made it easy to create forms and tables based on these queries. This tool was named FI (Form Interpreter). PHP/FI version 2.0 is a complete rewrite of these two packages combined into a single program. It evolved to a simple programming language embedded inside HTML files. PHP eliminates the need for numerous small Perl cgi programs by allowing you to place simple scripts directly in your HTML files. This speeds up the overall performance of your web pages since the overhead of forking Perl several times has been eliminated. It also makes it easier to manage large web sites by placing all components of a web page in a single html file. By including support for various databases, it also makes it trivial to develop database enabled web pages. Many people find the embedded nature much easier to deal with than trying to create separate HTML and CGI files. Now PHP/FI is renamed as PHP. 20.3. So, what can I do with PHP ? The first thing you will notice if you run a page through PHP is that it adds a footer with information about the number of times your page has been accessed (if you have compiled access logging into the binary). This is just a very small part of what PHP can do for you. It serves another very important role as a form interpreter cgi, hence the FI part of the old name. For example, if you create a form on one of your web pages, you need something to process the information on that form. Even if you just want to pass the information to another web page, you will have to have a cgi program do this for you. PHP makes it extremely easy to take form data and do things with it. 20.4. A simple example Suppose you have a form:
Your display.html file could then contain something like: < ?echo "Hi $ name, you are $ age years old!

" > It's that simple! PHP automatically creates a variable for each form input field in your form. You can then use these variables in the ACTION URL file. The next step once you have figured out how to use variables is to start playing with some logical flow tags in your pages. For example, if you wanted to display different messages based on something the user inputs, you would use if/else logic. In our above example, we can display different things based on the age the user entered by changing our display.html to: 50); echo "Hi $name, you are ancient!

"; elseif($age>30); echo "Hi $name, you are very old!

"; else; echo "Hi $name."; endif; > PHP provides a very powerful scripting language which will do much more than what the above simple example demonstrates. See the section on the PHP Script Language for more information. You can also use PHP to configure who is allowed to access your pages. This is done using a built-in configuration screen. With this you could for example specify that only people from certain domains would be allowed to see your pages, or you could create a rule which would password protect certain pages. See the Access Control section for more details. PHP is also capable of receiving file uploads from any RFC-1867 compliant web browser. This feature lets people upload both text and binary files. With PHP's access control and logical functions, you have full control over who is allowed to upload and what is to be done with the file once it has been uploaded. See the File Upload section for more details. PHP has support for the PostgreSQL database package. It supports embedded SQL queries in your .HTML files. PHP also has support for the mysql database package. It supports embedded SQL queries in your .HTML files. 20.5. CGI Redirection 20.5.1. Apache 1.0.x Notes A good way to run PHP is by using a cgi redirection module with the Apache server. Please note that you do not need to worry about redirection modules if you are using the Apache module version of PHP. There are two of these redirection modules available. One is developed by Dave Andersen · angio@aros.net and it is available at · and the other comes bundled with Apache and is called mod_actions.c. The modules are extremely similar. They differ slightly in their usage. Both have been tested and both work with PHP. Check the Apache documentation on how to add a module. Generally you add the module name to a file called Configuration. The line to be added if you want to use the mod_actions module is: Module action_module mod_actions.o If you are using the mod_cgi_redirect.c module add this line: Module cgi_redirect_module mod_cgi_redirect.o Then compile your httpd and install it. To configure the cgi redirection you need to either create a new mime type in your mime.types file or you can use the AddType command in your srm.conf file to add the mime type. The mime type to be added should be something like this: application/x-httpd-php phtml If you are using the mod_actions.c module you need to add the follow­ ing line to your srm.conf file: Action application/x-httpd-php /cgi-bin/php.cgi If you are using mod_cgi_redirect.c you should add this line to srm.conf: CgiRedirect application/x-httpd-php /cgi-bin/php.cgi Don't try to use both mod_actions.c and mod_cgi_redirect.c at the same time. Once you have one of these cgi redirection modules installed and configured correctly, you will be able to specify that you want a file parsed by PHP simply by making the file's extension .phtml. Furthermore, if you add index.phtml to your DirectoryIndex configuration line in your srm.conf file then the top-level page in a directory will be automatically parsed by php if your index file is called index.phtml. 20.5.2. Netscape HTTPD You can automatically redirect requests for files with a given extension to be handled by PHP by using the Netscape Server CGI Redirection module. This module is available in the File Archives on the PHP Home Page. The README in the package explicitly explains how to configure it for use with PHP. 20.5.3. NCSA HTTPD NCSA does not currently support modules, so in order to do cgi redirection with this server you need to modify your server source code. A patch to do this with NCSA 1.5 is available in the PHP file archives. 20.6. Running PHP from the command line If you build the CGI version of PHP, you can use it from the command line simply typing: php.cgi filename where filename is the file you want to parse. You can also create standalone PHP scripts by making the first line of your script look something like: #!/usr/local/bin/php.cgi -q The "-q" suppresses the printing of the HTTP headers. You can leave off this option if you like. 20.7. PHPGem package PHPGem is a PHP-script which accelerates the creation of PHP-scripts for working with tables. It works with different SQL-servers such as PostgreSQL, MySQL, mSQL, ODBC, and Adabas. You input a description of and parameters for your tables' fields (field name, on/off searching in the field, etc.), and PHPGem outputs another PHP-script which will work with the tables (view/add/edit/delete/duplicate entries and search). PHPGem works with multi-level nested tables. PHPGem allows you to specify a level of access for each table and for each field for each user. PHPGem also support images. PHPGem is at 21. Python Interface for PostgreSQL Python in an interpreted, object orientated scripting language. It is simple to use (light syntax, simple and straighforward statements), and has many extensions for building GUIs, interfacing with WWW, etc. An intelligent web browser (HotJava like) is currently under development (november 1995), and this should open programmers many doors. Python is copyrighted by Stichting S Mathematisch Centrum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, and is freely distributable. It contains support for dynamic loading of objects, classes, modules, and exceptions. Adding interfaces to new system libraries through C code is straightforward, making Python easy to use in custom settings. Python is a very high level scripting language with X interface. Python package is distributed on Linux cdroms includes most of the standard Python modules, along with modules for interfacing to the Tix widget set for Tk. PyGreSQL is a python module that interfaces to a PostgreSQL database. It embeds the PostgreSQL query library to allow easy use of the powerful PostgreSQL features from a Python script. PyGreSQL is written by D'Arcy J.M. Cain and Pascal Andre. · New site of PyGreSQL · Maintained by D'Arcy at · Old site is at · D'Arcy J.M. Cain darcy@druid.net · Pascal Andre andre@chimay.via.ecp.fr · Pascal Andre andre@via.ecp.fr 21.1. Where to get PyGres ? The home sites of the differents packages are: · Python · PyGreSQL · Old site You should anyway try to find some mirror site closer of your site. Refer to the information sources to find these sites. PyGreSQL should reside in the contrib directories of Python and PostgreSQL sites. 21.2. Information and support If you need information about these packages please check their web sites: · Python : · PostgreSQL : · PyGreSQL · Old site PyGreSQL : For support : · Mailing list for PyGreSQL. You can join by sending email to majordomo@vex.net with the line "subscribe pygresql name@domain" in the body replacing "name@domain" with your own email address. · Newsgroup for Python : newsgroup comp.lang.python · PyGreSQL : contact Andre at andre@via.ecp.fr for bug reports, ideas, remarks 21.3. Testing Python interface See the section - ``Testing Python PostgreSQL interface'' 22. Gateway between PostgreSQL and the WWW - WDB-P95 22.1. About wdb-p95 WDB-P95 - A Web interface to PostgreSQL Databases was created by J. Douglas Dunlop It is at · New WDB from J Rowe is at · New versions of WWW-WDB is at · For questions or to join Mailing lists contact dunlop@eol.ists.ca This is a modified version of wdb-1.3a2 which provides a gateway to a the WWW for PostgreSQL. This version also requires a Browser that is capable of handling HTML Tables for the tabular output. This is not required by the original wdb and can be fairly easily reverted. You can try out CASI Tape and Image Query. You can have a peek at the Form Definition File (FDF) which is used to create the CASI Tape and Image Query too, which includes a JOIN of 2 tables. This release contains all files necessary to install and run WDB-P95 as an interface to your PostgreSQL databases. To port this system to other database should be relatively easy - provided that it supports standard SQL and has a Perl interface. 22.2. Does the PostgreSQL server, pgperl, and httpd have to be on the same host? No - the PostgreSQL server does not have to be on the same host. As WDB-P95 is called by the http daemon, they have to be on the same host. - And as WDB-P95 was written to use Pg.pm - pgperl has to be on the same host too. Pgperl was written using the libpq library, so it will be able to access any PostgreSQL server anywhere in the net, just like any other PostgreSQL client. As illustrated below (WWW Client (Netscape)) => (HTTP Server (NCSA's http) + WDB-P95 + pgperl + libpq)=> (PostgreSQL server) Curly brackets () represent machines. Each machine can be of a different type : NT, SUN, HP, ... but you need the libpq interface library for the machine type where you plan to use WDB-P95, as you need it to compile pgperl. (The system was designed to use HTML tables so a recent WWW client is best) 23. "C", "C++", ESQL/C language Interfaces and Bitwise Operators for PostgreSQL 23.1. "C" interface It is included in distribution and is called 'libpq'. Similar to Oracle OCI, Sybase DB-lib, Informix CLI libraries. 23.2. "C++" interface It is included in distribution and is called 'libpq++'. See the section - ``Testing C and C++ PostgreSQL interface'' 23.3. ESQL/C ESQL/C 'Embedded C Pre-compiler' for PostgreSQL ESQL/C is like Oracle Pro*C, Informix ESQL/C. The PostgreSQL ESQL/C is an SQL application- programming interface (API) enables the C programmer to create custom applications with database-management capabilities. The PostgreSQL ESQL/C allows you to use a third-generation language with which you are familiar and still take advantage of the Structured Query Language (SQL). ESQL/C consists of the following pieces of software: · The ESQL/C libraries of C functions provide access to the database server. · The ESQL/C header files provide definitions for the data structures, constants, and macros useful to the ESQL/C program. · The ESQL/C preprocessor, is a source-code preprocessor that converts a C file containing SQL statements into an executable file. It is at · ESQL/C for PostgreSQL is already included in the distribution. · Main site · Email : linus@epact.se See the section - ``Testing Embedded SQL/C interface to PostgreSQL'' 23.4. BitWise Operators for PostgreSQL Bitwise operators was written by Nicolas Moldavsky · nico@overnet.com.ar "C" functions that implement bitwise operators (AND, OR, XOR, bit complement) on pgsql. Get them by anonymous FTP from · Makefile for Linux is included. 24. Japanese Kanji Code for PostgreSQL It is at the following site · 25. PostgreSQL Port to Windows 95/Windows NT PostgreSQL binaries for Windows NT is available from : · Windows NT PostgreSQL binaries · Download the binaries and unpack and follow instructions in ``Install PostgreSQL'' from step 13. If you want to re-compile the source tree then follow the instructions given below. Porting to NT is done using Cygnus cygwin32 package which has gcc, gmake for Win NT/95. · Cygwin 32 package is at At this site and get the file cdk.exe (self-extractor file for gnu- win32) 25.1. Authors of NT port The authors of Windows NT port of PostgreSQL are - · Daniel Horak horak@mmp.plzen-city.cz · Joost Kraaijeveld JKraaijeveld@askesis.nl · Kevin Lo kevlo@FreeBSD.org · Home page of NT port is at 25.2. Install the Cygwin package 1. Download 2. Run full.exe and install in c:\Unix\Root directory. 3. Run Cygwin, Type 'mount --help' for docs. You can use -f switch to force mount. And then run "umount / " and "mount c:\Unix\Root /" 25.3. Tuneup Bash Window After installing the Cygwin package, do the following to setup the working environment: 1. Install the Vi editor 'Vim'. See 2. The default window of cygwin bash is black-background window with 24 lines. To set the background color and size of bash window, click on NT-Start->Control-panel->MS DOS console and change the background color to grey and size to 70 lines. (OR) right click on Window titlebar and change property. 3. Edit cygnus.bat in c:\cygnus\cywinb20 and set the following - ______________________________________________________________________ set HOME=c:\cygnus\cygwinb20 bash --login ______________________________________________________________________ And also edit the /.bash_profile and put these lines ______________________________________________________________________ set -o vi PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin export PATH ______________________________________________________________________ 4. To enable the command-line history editing give - bash$ set -o vi Using the l,k,j,h you can use the vi commands to edit the command line history commands. You can repeat or modify previous commands, saves typing time. 5. You can do mount of drives/directories using this command - ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ umount / bash$ mount "c:\cygnus" / bash$ mount "c:\cygnus\cygwin-b20\postgres" /usr/local/pgsql ______________________________________________________________________ 6. See online help with - ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ mount --help bash$ ls --help ______________________________________________________________________ 25.4. Install the Andy Piper tools 1. Go to and download cygwin- b20-local.tar.bz2 in the c:/Unix/Root directory. 2. cd c:/Unix/Root; bunzip2 cygwin-b20-local.tar.bz2 3. tar -xvf cygwin-b20-local.tar 4. cd /local/bin; sh check_cygwin_setup.sh 5. After doing step 4, you see the following message: ___________________________________________________________________ You don't have /bin would you like to mount cygwin as /bin?" [ y/n ] Select 'n', and the other options are selected 'y' ___________________________________________________________________ 6. mount c:/Unix/Root/cygwin-b20/H-i586-cygwin32/i586-cygwin32/bin /bin 7. cd c:/Unix/Root/cygwin-b20/H-i586-cygwin32/i586-cygwin32; mkdir libexec share man etc sbin info 8. cp -R /local/{ bin,libexec,share,man,etc,sbin,info,include } 25.5. Install Ludovic Lange's Cygwin32 IPC package 1. Go to and download cygwin32_ipc-1.03.tgz in c:/Unix/Root directory. 2. tar -zxvf cygwin32_ipc-1.03.tgz 3. cd cygwin32_ipc-1.03/src and run 'make' 4. mkdir -p c:/usr/local/{bin,include,lib,include/sys} ___________________________________________________________________ cp /cygwin32_ipc-1.03/bin/* c:/usr/local/bin cp /cygwin32_ipc-1.03/include/sys/* c:/usr/local/include/sys cp /cygwin32_ipc-1.03/lib/* c:/usr/local/lib cp c:/usr/local/bin/* /bin cp c:/Unix/Root/cygwin-b20/H-i586-cygwin32/bin/* /bin ___________________________________________________________________ 5. mount c:/usr/local/bin /usr/local/bin ___________________________________________________________________ mount c:/usr/local/include /usr/local/include mount c:/usr/local/lib /usr/local/lib cp /local/lib/* /usr/local/lib ___________________________________________________________________ 25.6. Install PostgreSQL 1. Download the latest PostgreSQL source code 2. Postgres treats all files as binary files so the lf/cf stuff appeard, so we do steps 2, 3, 4, and 5: ___________________________________________________________________ mkdir -p c:/Postgres/{Source,Binary} mkdir c:/Postgres/Binary/pgsql mkdir -p /usr/src/pgsql mkdir -p /usr/local/pgsql ___________________________________________________________________ 3. Copy Postgres source code to c:/Postgres/Source directory, then tar -zxvf postgresql-6.5.3.tar.gz 4. mv postgresql-6.5.3 pgsql 5. Mount directories now - ___________________________________________________________________ mount -b c:/Postgres/Binary/pgsql /usr/local/pgsql mount c:/Postgres/Source/pgsql /usr/src/pgsql mount c:/Unix/Root/cygwin-b20/share /sw/cygwin-b20/share ___________________________________________________________________ 6. mkdir -p /usr/local/pgsql/{bin,include,lib,data} 7. cd /usr/src/pgsql/src/win32 8. Copy header files - ___________________________________________________________________ cp un.h c:/Unix/Root/cygwin-b20/H-i586-cygwin32/i586-cygwin32/include/sys cp endian.h c:/Unix/Root/cygwin-b20/H-i586-cygwin32/i586-cygwin32/include cp tcp.h c:/Unix/Root/cygwin-b20/H-i586-cygwin32/i586-cygwin32/include/netinet ___________________________________________________________________ 9. ln -s /usr/local/lib /usr/src/pgsql/src/backend/libpostgres.a 10. cd /usr/src/pgsql/src, then run './configure' 11. make > make.txt 2>&1 12. make install > make.install.txt 2>&1 13. cp /usr/local/pgsql/lib/pq.dll /usr/local/pgsql/bin 14. After the make install you had to change all the text files in the bin and lib diectories so that they did not contain cr/lf and eof stuff. 15. Using any editor to create .bashrc in / directory as belows: ___________________________________________________________________ PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/pgsql/bin:/usr/local/bin PGDATA=/usr/local/pgsql/data PGLIB=/usr/local/pgsql/lib LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/pgsql/lib:/usr/local/lib export LD_LIBRARY_PATH PATH PGDATA PGLIB ___________________________________________________________________ 16. source /.bashrc, then run 'initdb --username=xxxx' Note that the owner of the DB system have to be different from root/administrator 17. Edit the file /usr/local/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf, such as: ___________________________________________________________________ host all 163.17.11.109 255.255.255.0 trust ___________________________________________________________________ 18. ipc-daemon.exe& 19. postmaster -i& 20. Run ' psql -h host_name template1' 26. Mailing Lists 26.1. E-mail account for PostgreSQL Get free e-mail accounts from · In Yahoo click on e-mail · In Lycos click on new e-mail accounts · In hotmail click on new e-mail accounts Subscribe to PostgreSQL mailing list and Yahoo has additional feature of creating a seperate folder for PostgreSQL e-mails, so that your regular e-mail is not cluttered. Select menu Email- > Options- > Filters and pick seperate folder for email. With this e-mail account you can access mail from anywhere in the world as long as you have access to a web page. If you have any other e-mail, you can use "Mail Filters" to receive automatically the PostgreSQL mails into a seperate folder. This will avoid mail cluttering. 26.2. English Mailing List See the Mailing Lists Item on the main web page at : · · Email questions to: pgsql-questions@postgresql.org · Developers pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org · Port specific questions pgsql-ports@postgresql.org · Documentation questions pgsql-docs@postgresql.org You will get the answers/replies back by e-mail in less than a day. You can also subscribe to mailing lists. To subscribe or unsubscribe from the list, send mail to · pgsql-questions-request@postgresql.org · pgsql-hackers-request@postgresql.org · pgsql-ports-request@postgresql.org · pgsql-docs-request@postgresql.org The body of the message should contain the single line subscribe (or) unsubscribe 26.3. Archive of Mailing List Also mailing lists are archived in html format at the following location - · Date-wise listing available via MHonarc via the WWW at · directory is /pub/majordomo There is also search engine available on the PostgreSQL main web site specifically for pgsql questions. 26.4. Spanish Mailing List Now there is an "unofficial" list of postgreSQL in Spanish. To subscribe the user has to send a message to: · majordomo@tlali.iztacala.unam.mx The body of the message should contain the single line: inscripcion pgsql-ayuda 27. Documentation and Reference Books 27.1. User Guides and Manuals The following are included in the PostgreSQL distribution in the postscript, HTML formats and unix man-pages. They are located in /usr/doc/postgresql* directory. If you have access to internet, you can find the documents listed below at · "Installation Guide" · "User Guide" for PostgreSQL · "Implementation Guide" detailing database internals of PostgreSQL. · Online manuals. · Online manuals in HTML formats. · Also manuals in Postscript format for printing hard copies. 27.2. Online Documentation · Listing and description of default data types and operators Is a a part of PSQL command · Listing of supported SQL keywords There is a script in the /tools directory in source code tree. · Listings of supported statements - Use the command psql \h · Basic relational database concepts under PostgreSQL (implementation) and several online examples (queries) - Look at the regression tests at src/test. There you can find the directories regress/sql and suite/*.sql and also see · Tutorial for PostgreSQL. SQL tutorial scripts is in the directory src/tutorial See also "SQL Tutorial for beginners" in Appendix B of this document ``'' 27.3. Useful Reference Textbooks · "Understanding the New SQL: A Complete Guide" - by Jim Melton and Alan R.Simon Morgan Kaufman Publisher is one of best SQL books. This deals with SQL92. · "A Guide to THE SQL STANDARD" - by C.J.Date Addison-Wesley Publishing company is also a good book. Very popular book for SQL. · SQL - The Standard Handbook, November 1992 Stephen Cannan and Gerard Otten McGraw-Hill Book Company Europe , Berkshire, SL6 2QL, England · SQL Instant Reference, 1993 Martin Gruber, Technical Editor: Joe Celko SYBEX Inc. 2021 Challenger Drive Alameda, CA 94501 · C.J.Date, "An introduction to Database Systems" (6th Edition), Addison-Wesley, 1995, ISBN 0-201-82458-2 This book is the Bible of Database Management Systems. The book details normalization, SQL, recovery, concurrency, security, integrity, and extensions to the original relational model, current issues like client/server systems and the Object Oriented model(s). Many references are included for further reading. Recommended for most users. · Stefan Stanczyk, "Theory and Practice of Relational Databases", UCL Press Ltd, 1990, ISBN 1-857-28232-9 Book details theory of relational databases, relational algebra, calculus and normalisation. But it does not cover real world issues and examples beyond simple examples. Recommended for most users. · "The Practical SQL Handbook" Third Edition, Addison Wesley Developers Press ISBN 0-201-44787-8 Recommended for most users. · Michael Stonebraker, "Readings in Database Systems", Morgan Kaufmann, 1988, ISBN 0-934613-65-6 This book is a collection of papers that have been published over the years on databases. It's not for the casual user but it is really a reference for advanced (post-graduate) students or database system developers. · C.J.Date, "Relational Database - Selected Readings", Addison- Wesley, 1986, ISBN 0-201-14196-5 This book is a collection of papers that have been published over the years on databases. It's not for the casual user but it is really a reference for advanced (post-graduate) students or database system developers. · Nick Ryan and Dan Smith, "Database Systems Engineering", International Thomson Computer Press, 1995, ISBN 1-85032-115-9 This book goes into the details of access methods, storage techniques. · Bipin C. Desai, "An introduction to Database Systems", West Publishing Co., 1990, ISBN 0-314-66771-7 It's not for the casual user but it is for advanced (post-graduate) students or database system developers. · Joe Celko "INSTANT SQL Programming" Wrox Press Ltd. Unit 16, 20 James Road, Tyseley Birmingham, B11 2BA, England 1995 · Michael Gorman "Database Management Systems: Understanding and Applying Database" Technology QED and John Wiley 1991 · Michael Gorman "Enterprise Database for a Client/Server Environment" QED and John Wiley Presents the requirements of building client/server database applications via repository metamodels and the use of ANSI standard SQL 1993 Hundreds of other titles on SQL are available! Check out a bookstore. 27.4. ANSI/ISO SQL Specifications documents - SQL 1992, SQL 1998 ANSI/ISO SQL specifications documents can be found at these sites listed below - · · and click on file cat_c.html and search with "Database SQL" · SQL92 standard and click on file sql_stnd.html · ANSI/ISO SQL specifications You will find SQL Reference here. 27.5. Syntax of ANSI/ISO SQL 1992 See Appendix A of this document ``'' 27.6. Syntax of ANSI/ISO SQL 1998 The SQL 1998 (SQL 3) specification is still under development. See 'Electronic Access to the SQL3 Working Draft' of this document at ``'' 27.7. SQL Tutorial for beginners See Appendix B of this document ``'' 27.8. Temporal Extension to SQL92 · Document for Temporal Extension to SQL-92 · Temporal SQL-3 specification This directory contains the language specification for a temporal extension to the SQL-92 language standard. This new language is designated TSQL2. The language specification present here is the final version of the language. Correspondence may be directed to the chair of the TSQL2 Language Design Committee, Richard T.Snodgrass, Department of Computer Science, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, · rts@cs.arizona.edu The affiliations and e-mail addresses of the TSQL2 Language Design Committee members may be found in a separate section at the end of the language specification. The contents of this directory are as follows. spec.dvi,.ps TSQL2 Language Specification, published in September, 1994 bookspec.ps TSQL2 Language Specification, as it appears in the TSQL2 book, published in September, 1995 (see below). sql3 change proposals submitted to the ANSI and ISO SQL3 committees. Associated with the language specification is a collection of commentaries which discuss design decisions, provide examples, and consider how the language may be implemented. These commentaries were originally proposals to the TSQL2 Language Design Committee. They now serve a different purpose: to provide examples of the constructs, motivate the many decisions made during the language design, and compare TSQL2 with the many other language proposals that have been made over the last fifteen years. It should be emphasized that these commentaries are not part of the TSQL2 language specification per se, but rather supplement and elaborate upon it. The language specification proper is the final word on TSQL2. The commentaries, along with the language specification, several indexes, and other supporting material, has been published as a book: Snodgrass, R.T., editor, The TSQL2 Temporal Query Language, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1995, 674+xxiv pages. The evaluation commentary appears in the book in an abbreviated form; the full commentary is provided in this directory as file eval.ps The file tl2tsql2.pl is a prolog program that tranlates allowed temporal logic to TSQL2. This program was written by Michael Boehlen · boehlen@iesd.auc.dk He may be contacted for a paper that describes this translation. This is a rather dated version of that program. Newer versions are available at · (the TimeDB and Tiger systems). 27.9. Part 0 - Acquiring ISO/ANSI SQL Documents This document shows you how to (legally) acquire a copy of the SQL-92 standard and how to acquire a copy of the "current" SQL3 Working Draft. The standard is copyrighted ANSI standard by ANSI, the ISO standard by ISO. There are two (2) current SQL standards, an ANSI publication and an ISO publication. The two standards are word-for-word identical except for such trivial matters as the title of the document, page headers, the phrase "International Standard" vs "American Standard", and so forth. Buying the SQL-92 Standard The ISO standard, ISO/IEC 9075:1992, Information Technology - Database Languages - SQL, is currently (March, 1993) available and in stock from ANSI at: American National Standards Institute 1430 Broadway New York, NY 10018 (USA) Phone (sales): +1.212.642.4900 at a cost of US$230.00. The ANSI version, ANSI X3.135-1992, American National Standard for Information Systems - Database Language SQL, was not available from stock at this writing, but was expected to be available by some time between late March and early May, 1993). It is expected to be be priced at US$225.00. If you purchase either document from ANSI, it will have a handling charge of 7% added to it (that is, about US$9.10). Overseas shipping charges will undoubtedly add still more cost. ANSI requires a hardcopy of a company purchase order to accompany all orders; alternately, you can send a check drawn on a US bank in US dollars, which they will cash and clear before shipping your order. (An exception exists: If your organization is a corporate member of ANSI, then ANSI will ship the documents and simply bill your company.) The ISO standard is also available outside the United States from local national bodies (country standardization bodies) that are members of either ISO (International Organization for Standardization) or IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission). Copies of the list of national bodies and their addresses are available from ANSI or from other national bodies. They are also available from ISO: International Organization for Standardization Central Secretariat 1, rue de Varembi CH-1211 Genhve 20 Switzerland If you prefer to order the standard in a more convenient and quick fashion, you'll have to pay for the privilege. You can order ISO/IEC 9075:1992, Information Technology - Database Languages - SQL, from: Global Engineering Documents 2805 McGaw Ave Irvine, CA 92714 (USA) USA Phone (works from anywhere): +1.714.261.1455 Phone (only in the USA): (800)854-7179 for a cost of US$308.00. I do not know if that includes shipping or not, but I would guess that international shipping (at least) would cost extra. They will be able to ship you a document fairly quickly and will even accept "major credit cards". Global does not yet have the ANSI version nor do they have a price or an expected date (though I would expect it within a few weeks following the publication by ANSI and at a price near US$300.00). Buying a copy of the SQL3 Working Draft You can purchase a hardcopy of the SQL3 working draft from the ANSI X3 Secretariat, CBEMA (Computer and Business Equipment Manufacturers Association). They intend to keep the "most recent" versions of the SQL3 working draft available and sell them for about US$60.00 to US$65.00. You can contact CBEMA at: CBEMA, X3 Secretariat Attn: Lynn Barra 1250 Eye St. Suite 200 Washington, DC 20005 (USA) Lynn Barra can also be reached by telephone at +1.202.626.5738 to request a copy, though mail is probably more courteous. Electronic Access to the SQL3 Working Draft The most recent version (as of the date of this writing) of the SQL3 (both ANSI and ISO) working draft (and all of its Parts) is available by "anonymous ftp" or by "ftpmail" on: gatekeeper.dec.com at /pub/standards/sql/ In this directory are a number of files. There are PostScript. files and "plain text" (not prettily formatted, but readable on a screen without special software). In general, you can find files with names like: sql-bindings-mar94.ps sql-bindings-mar94.txt sql-cli-mar94.ps sql-cli-mar94.txt sql-foundation-mar94.ps sql-foundation-mar94.txt sql-framework-mar94.ps sql-framework-mar94.txt sql-psm-mar94.ps sql-psm-mar94.txt As new versions of the documents are produced, the "mar94" will change to indicate the new date of publication (e.g., "aug94" is the expected date of the next publication after "mar94"). In addition, for those readers unable to get a directory listing by FTP, we have placed a file with the name: ls into the same directory. This file (surprise!) contains a directory listing of the directory. Retrieving Files Directly Using ftp This is a sample of how to use FTP. Specifically, it shows how to connect to gatekeeper.dec.com, get to the directory where the base document is kept, and transfer the document to your host. Note that your host must have Internet access to do this. The login is 'ftp' and the password is your email address (this is sometimes referred to as bits are stripped from the file(s) received. 'get' gets one file at a time. Comments in the script below are inside angle brackets < like so > . % ftp gatekeeper.dec.com Connected to gatekeeper.dec.com. 220- *** /etc/motd.ftp *** Gatekeeper.DEC.COM is an unsupported service of DEC Corporate Research. <...this goes on for a while...> 220 gatekeeper.dec.com FTP server (Version 5.83 Sat ... 1992) ready. Name (gatekeeper.dec.com:): ftp 331 Guest login ok, send ident as password. Password: 230 Guest login ok, access restrictions apply. Remote system type is UNIX. Using binary mode to transfer files. ftp> cd pub/standards/sql 250 CWD command successful. ftp> dir 200 PORT command successful. 150 Opening ASCII mode data connection for /bin/ls. total 9529 -r--r--r-- 1 root system 357782 Feb 25 10:18 x3h2-93-081.ps -r--r--r-- 1 root system 158782 Feb 25 10:19 x3h2-93-081.txt -r--r--r-- 1 root system 195202 Feb 25 10:20 x3h2-93-082.ps -r--r--r-- 1 root system 90900 Feb 25 10:20 x3h2-93-082.txt -r--r--r-- 1 root system 5856284 Feb 25 09:55 x3h2-93-091.ps -r--r--r-- 1 root system 3043687 Feb 25 09:57 x3h2-93-091.txt 226 Transfer complete. ftp> type binary 200 Type set to I. ftp> get x3h2-93-082.txt 200 PORT command successful. 150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for x3h2-93-082.txt (90900 bytes). 226 Transfer complete. 90900 bytes received in 0.53 seconds (166.11 Kbytes/s) ftp> quit % Retrieving Files Without Direct ftp Support Digital Equipment Corporation, like several other companies, provides ftp email service. The response can take several days, but it does provide a service equivalent to ftp for those without direct Internet ftp access. The address of the server is: ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com The following script will retrieve the PostScript for the latest version of the SQL3 document: reply joe.programmer@imaginary-corp.com connect gatekeeper.dec.com anonymous binary compress The following script will retrieve the PostScript for the latest ver­ sion of the SQL3 document: reply joe.programmer@imaginary-corp.com connect gatekeeper.dec.com anonymous binary compress uuencode chdir /pub/standards/sql get x3h2-93-091.ps quit The first line in the script commands the server to return the requested files to you; you should replace "joe.programmer@imaginary- corp.com" with your Internet address. The file in this example, x3h2-93-091.ps, is returned in "compress"ed "uuencode"d format as 34 separate email messages. If your environment does not provide tools for reconstructing such files, then you could retrieve the file as plain text with the following script: reply joe.programmer@imaginary-corp.com connect gatekeeper.dec.com anonymous chdir /pub/standards/sql get x3h2-93-091.ps quit But be warned, the .ps file will probably be sent to you in more than 70 parts! To retrieve any particular file, other than x3h2-93-091.ps, simply replace "x3h2-93-091.ps" with the name of the desired file. To get a directory listing of all files available, replace "get x3h2-93-091.ps" with "dir". 27.10. Part 1 - ISO/ANSI SQL Current Status This chapter is a source of information about the SQL standards process and its current state. Current Status: Development is currently underway to enhance SQL into a computationally complete language for the definition and management of persistent, complex objects. This includes: generalization and specialization hierarchies, multiple inheritance, user defined data types, triggers and assertions, support for knowledge based systems, recursive query expressions, and additional data administration tools. It also includes the specification of abstract data types (ADTs), object identifiers, methods, inheritance, polymorphism, encapsulation, and all of the other facilities normally associated with object data management. In the fall of 1996, several parts of SQL3 went through a ISO CD ballot. Those parts were SQL/Framework, SQL/Foundation, and SQL/Bindings. Those ballots failed (as expected) with 900 or so comments. In Late January, there was an ISO DBL editing meeting that processed a large number of problem solutions that were either included with ballot comments or submitted as separate papers. Since the DBL editing meeting was unable to process all of the comments, the editing meeting has been extended. The completion of the editing meeting is scheduled for the end of July, 1997, in London. Following the July editing meeting, the expectation is that a Final CD ballot will be requested for these parts of SQL. The Final CD process will take about 6 months and a DBL editing meeting, after which there will be a DIS ballot and a fairly quick IS ballot. The ISO procedures have changed since SQL/92, so the SQL committees are still working through the exact details of the process. If everything goes well, these parts of SQL3 will become an official ISO/IEC standard in late 1998, but the schedule is very tight. In 1993, the ANSI and ISO development committees decided to split future SQL development into a multi-part standard. The Parts are: · Part 1: Framework A non-technical description of how the document is structured. · Part 2: Foundation The core specification, including all of the new ADT features. · Part 3: SQL/CLI The Call Level Interface. · Part 4: SQL/PSM The stored procedures specification, including computational completeness. · Part 5: SQL/Bindings The Dynamic SQL and Embedded SQL bindings taken from SQL-92. · Part 6: SQL/XA An SQL specialization of the popular XA Interface developed by X/Open · Part 7:SQL/TemporalAdds time related capabilities to the SQL standards. In the USA, the entirety of SQL3 is being processed as both an ANSI Domestic ("D") project and as an ISO project. The expected time frame for completion of SQL3 is currently 1999. The SQL/CLI and SQL/PSM are being processed as fast as possible as addendums to SQL-92. In the USA, these are being processed only as International ("I") projects. SQL/CLI was completed in 1995. SQL/PSM should be completed sometime in late 1996. In addition to the SQL3 work, a number of additional projects are being persued: · SQL/MM An ongoing effort to define standard multi-media packages using the SQL3 ADT capabilities. · Remote Data Access (RDA) Standards Committee and Process There are actually a number of SQL standards committees around the world. There is an international SQL standards group as a part of ISO. A number of countries have committees that focus on SQL. These countries (usually) send representatives to ISO/IEC JTC1/SC 21/WG3 DBL meetings. The countries that actively participate in the ISO SQL standards process are: · Australia · Brazil · Canada · France · Germany · Japan · Korea · The Netherlands · United Kingdom · United States NIST Validation SQL implementations are validated (in the Unites States) by the National Institute of Standards and Training (NIST). NIST currently has a validation test suite for entry level SQL-92. The exact details of the NIST validation requirements are defined as a Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS). The current requirements for SQL are defined in FIPS 127-2. The Postscript and Text versions of this document can be retrieved from NIST. The current SQL Validated Products List can also be retrieved from NIST. Standard SQL Publications and Articles There are two versions of the SQL standard. Both are available from ANSI: · ISO/IEC 9075:1992, "Information Technology --- Database Languages --- SQL" · ANSI X3.135-1992, "Database Language SQL" The two versions of the SQL standard are identical except for the front matter and references to other standards. Both versions are available from: American National Standards Institute 1430 Broadway New York, NY 10018 USA Phone (sales): +1.212.642.4900 In additon to the SQL-92 standard, there is now a Technical Corrigen­ dum (bug fixes): * Technical Corrigendum 1:1994 to ISO/IEC 9075:1992 TC 1 should also be available from ANSI. There is only an ISO version of TC 1 -- it applies both to the ISO and ANSI versions of SQL-92. In addition to the standards, several books have been written about the 1992 SQL standard. These books provide a much more readable description of the standard than the actual standard. Related Standards A number of other standards are of interest to the SQL community. This section contains pointers to information on those efforts. These pointers will be augmented as additional information becomes available on the web. · SQL Environments (FIPS 193) · Next Generation Repository Systems (X3H4) - a News Release calling for particpation in "Developing Standards for the Next Generation Repository Systems." 27.11. Part 2 - ISO/ANSI SQL Foundation A significant portion of the SQL3 effort is in the SQL Foundation document: · Base SQL/PSM capabilities (moved form SQL/PSM-92) · New data types · Triggers · Subtables · Abstract Data Types (ADT) · Object Oriented Capabilities There are several prerequisites to the object oriented capabilities: · Capability of defining complex operations · Store complex operations in the database · External procedure calls ­ Some operations may not be in SQL, or may require external interactions These capabilities are defined as a part of SQL/PSM A great deal of work is currently being done to refine the SQL-3 object model and align it with the object model proposed by ODMG. This effort is described in the X3H2 and ISO DBL paper: Accomodating SQL3 and ODMG. A recent update on the SQL3/OQL Merger is also available. SQL3 Timing Work on SQL3 is well underway, but the final standards is several years away. · International ballot to progress SQL3 Foundation from Working Draft to Committee Draft (CD) taking place fall, 1996. · Ballot is expected to generate numerous comments · A second CD ballot is likely to be required · Draft International Standard ballot is likely to be take place in mid 1998 · International Standard could be completed by mid 1999. The ANSI version of the standard will be on a similar schedule. 27.12. Part 3 - ISO/ANSI SQL Call Level Interface The SQL/CLI is a programing call level interface to SQL databases. It is designed to support database access from shrink-wrapped applications. The CLI was originally created by a subcommittee of the SQL Access Group (SAG). The SAG/CLI specification was published as the Microsoft Open DataBase Connectivity (ODBC) specification in 1992. In 1993, SAG submitted the CLI to the ANSI and ISO SQL committees. (The SQL Access Group has now merged with X/Open consortium.) SQL/CLI provides an international standard for: · Implementation-independent CLI to access SQL databases · Client-server tools can easily access database through dynamic Link Libraries · Supports and encourages rich set of Client-server tools SQL/CLI Timing For the standards process, SQL/CLI is being processed with blinding speed. · SQL/CLI is an addendum to 1992 SQL standard (SQL-92) · Completed as an ISO standard in 1995 · ISO/IEC 9075-3:1995 Information technology -- Database languages -- SQL -- Part 3: Call-Level Interface (SQL/CLI) · Current SQL/CLI effort is adding support for SQL3 features 27.13. Part 4 - ISO/ANSI SQL Persistent Stored Modules SQL/PSM expands SQL by adding: · Procedural language extensions · Multi-statement and Stored Procedures · External function and procedure calls In addition to being a valuable application development tool, SQL/PSM provides the foundation support for the object oriented capabilities in SQL3. Multi-statement and Stored Procedures Multi-statement and stored procedures offer a variety of advantages in a client/server environment: · Performance - Since a stored procedure can perform multiple SQL statements, network interaction with the client are reduced. · Security - A user can be given the right to call a stored procedure that updates a table or set of tables but denied the right to update the tables directly · Shared code - The code in a stored procedure does not have to be rewritten and retested for each client tool that accesses the database. · Control - Provides a single point of definition and control for application logic. Procedural Language Extensions Procedural language add the power of a traditional programming language to SQL through flow control statements and a variety of other programming constructs. Flow Control Statements · If-then-else · Looping constructs · Exception handling · Case statement · Begin-End blocks The procedural language extensions include other programming language constructs: · Variable declarations · Set statements for value assignment · Get diagnostics for process and status information In addition, all of the traditional SQL statements can be included in multi-statement procedures. External Procedure and Function Calls One feature frequently mentioned in the wish lists for many database products, and implemented in some, is a capability augmenting the built-in features with calls to user-written procedures external to the database software. · Allows a particular site or application to add their own database functions · Can be used throughout the database applications The benefit of this capability is that it gives the database (and therefore database applications) access to a rich set of procedures and functions too numerous to be defined by a standards committee. SQL/PSM Timing SQL/PSM is proceeding quickly: · SQL/PSM is an addendum to SQL-92 · International ballot to progress SQL/PSM from a Draft International Standard to an International Standard ended January, 1996. · Editing meeting in May, 1996 did not resolve all of the comments · Continuation of PSM Editing meeting is scheduled for September 30 through October 4, 1996 · The schedule is tight but there is a chance that PSM will be published with a 1996 date. · The official designation will be: ISO/IEC DIS 9075-4:199? Information technology -- Database languages -- SQL -- Part 4: SQL Persistent Stored Modules (SQL/PSM) · Work is well underway on adding SQL/PSM support for SQL3 features. 27.14. Part 5 - ISO/ANSI SQL/Bindings For ease of reference, the programming language bindings have been pulled out into a separate document. The current version is simply an extract of the dynamic and embedded bindings from SQL-92. A variety of issues remain unresolved for the programming language bindings. For traditional programming language, mappings exist for the SQL-92 datatypes. However, mappings must be defined between SQL objects and programming language variables. For object oriented languages, mapping must be defined for the current SQL datatypes and between the SQL object model and the object model of the object-oriented language. The object model needs to stabilize before these can be addressed. The language bindings will be completed as a part of SQL3. 27.15. Part 6 - ISO/ANSI SQL XA Interface Specialization (SQL/XA) This specification would standardize an application program interface (API) between a global Transaction Manager and an SQL Resource Manager. It would standardize the function calls, based upon the semantics of ISO/IEC 10026, "Distributed Transaction Processing", that an SQL Resource Manager would have to support for two-phase commit. The base document is derived from an X/Open publication, with X/Open permission, that specifies explicit input and output parameters and semantics, in terms of SQL data types, for the following functions: xa_close, xa_commit, xa_complete, xa_end, xa_forget, xa_open, xa_prepare, xa_recover, xa_rollback, and xa_start. ISO is currently attempting to fast-track the X/Open XA specification. The fast-track process adopts a current industry specification with no changes. The XA fast-track ballot at the ISO SC21, JTC 1 level started on April 27, 1995 and ends on October 27, 1995. If the XA specification is approved by 75% of the votes, and by 2/3 of the p- members of JTC 1, it will become an International Standard. If the fast-track ballot is approved, SQL/XA could become a standard in 1996. 27.16. Part 7 - ISO/ANSI SQL Temporal Temporal SQL deals with time-related data. The concept is that it is useful to query data to discover what it looked like at a particular point in time. Temporal SQL is a December, 1994 paper by Rick Snodgrass describing the concepts. X3 Announces the Approval of a New Project, ISO/IEC 9075 Part 7: SQL/Temporal is a press release related to SQL/Temporal. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Temporal SQL ************ Rick Snodgrass (chair of the TSQL2 committee) 31-Dec-1994 Several people have questioned the need for additional support for time in SQL3 (as proposed by DBL RIO-75, requesting a new part of SQL to support temporal databases). The claim is that abstract data types (ADT's) are sufficient for temporal support. In this informational item, I argue, using concrete examples, that using columns typed with abstract data types is inadequate for temporal queries. In particular, many common temporal queries are either difficult to simulate in SQL, or require embedding SQL in a procedural language. Alternatives are expressed in TSQL2, a temporal extension to SQL-92. 27.16.1. INTRODUCTION Valid-time support goes beyond that of a temporal ADT. With the later, a column is specified as of a temporal domain, such as DATE or INTERVAL (examples will be given shortly). With valid time, the rows of a table vary over time, as reality changes. The timestamp associated with a row of a valid-time table is interpreted by the query language as the time when the combination of values of the columns in the row was valid. This implicit timestamp allows queries to be expressed succinctly and intuitively. 27.16.2. A CASE STUDY - STORING CURRENT INFORMATION The University of Arizona's Office of Appointed Personnel has some information in a database, including each employee's name, their current salary, and their current title. This can be represented by a simple table. Employee(Name, Salary, Title) Given this table, finding an employee's salary is easy. SELECT Salary FROM Employee WHERE Name = 'Bob' Now the OAP wishes to record the date of birth. To do so, a column is added to the table, yielding the following schema. Employee(Name, Salary, Title, DateofBirth DATE) Finding the employee's date of birth is analogous to determining the salary. SELECT DateofBirth FROM Employee WHERE Name = 'Bob' 27.16.3. A CASE STUDY - STORING HISTORY INFORMATION The OAP wishes to computerize the employment history. To do so, they append two columns, one indicating when the information in the row became valid, the other indicating when the information was no longer valid. Employee (Name, Salary, Title, DateofBirth, Start DATE, Stop DATE) To the data model, these new columns are identical to DateofBirth. However, their presence has wide-ranging consequences. 27.16.4. A CASE STUDY - PROJECTION To find an employee's current salary, things are more difficult. SELECT Salary FROM Employee WHERE Name = 'Bob' AND Start <= CURRENT_DATE AND CURRENT_DATE <= Stop This query is more complicated than the previous one. The culprit is obviously the two new columns. The OAP wants to distribute to each employee their salary history. Specifically, for each person, the max­ imal intervals at each salary needs to be determined. Unfortunately, this is not possible in SQL. An employee could have arbitrarily many title changes between salary changes. Name Salary Title DateofBirth Start Stop ---- ------ ----- ----------- ----- ---- Bob 60000 Assistant Provost 1945-04-09 1993-01-01 1993-05-30 Bob 70000 Assistant Provost 1945-04-09 1993-06-01 1993-09-30 Bob 70000 Provost 1945-04-09 1993-10-01 1994-01-31 Bob 70000 Professor 1945-04-09 1994-02-01 1994-12-31 Figure 1 Note that there are three rows in which Bob's salary remained constant at $70,000. Hence, the result should be two rows for Bob. Name Salary Start Stop ---- ------ ----- ---- Bob 60000 1993-01-01 1993-05-30 Bob 70000 1993-06-01 1994-12-31 One alternative is to give the user a printout of Salary and Title information, and have user determine when his/her salary changed. This alternative is not very appealing or realistic. A second alternative is to use SQL as much as possible. CREATE TABLE Temp(Salary, Start, Stop) AS SELECT Salary, Start, Stop FROM Employee; repeat UPDATE Temp T1 SET (T1.Stop) = (SELECT MAX(T2.Stop) FROM Temp AS T2 WHERE T1.Salary = T2.Salary AND T1.Start < T2.Start AND T1.Stop >= T2.Start AND T1.Stop < T2.Stop) WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM Temp AS T2 WHERE T1.Salary = T2.Salary AND T1.Start < T2.Start AND T1.Stop >= T2.Start AND T1.Stop < T2.Stop) until no rows updated; DELETE FROM Temp T1 WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM Temp AS T2 WHERE T1.Salary = T2.Salary AND ((T1.Start > T2.Start AND T1.Stop <= T2.Stop) OR (T1.Start >= T2.Start AND T1.Stop < T2.Stop)) The loop finds those intervals that overlap or are adjacent and thus should be merged. The loop is executed log N times in the worst case, where N is the number of rows in a chain of overlapping or adjacent value-equivalent rows. The reader can simulate the query on the exam­ ple table to convince him/herself of its correctness. A third alternative is to use SQL only to open a cursor on the table. A linked list of periods is maintained, each with a salary. This linked list should be initialized to empty. DECLARE emp_cursor CURSOR FOR SELECT Salary, Title, Start, Stop FROM Employee; OPEN emp_cursor; loop: FETCH emp_cursor INTO :salary, :start, :stop; if no-data returned then goto finished; find position in linked list to insert this information; goto loop; finished: CLOSE emp_cursor; iterate through linked list, printing out dates and salaries The linked list may not be necessary in this case if the cursor is ORDER BY Start. In any case, the query, a natural one, is quite difficult to express using the facilities present in SQL-92. The query is trivial in TSQL2. SELECT Salary FROM Employee 27.16.5. A CASE STUDY - JOIN A more drastic approach is to avoid the problem of extracting the salary history by reorganizing the schema to separate salary, title, and date of birth information (in the following, we ignore the date of birth, for simplicity). Employee1 (Name, Salary, Start DATE, Stop DATE) Employee2 (Name, Title, Start DATE, Stop DATE) The Employee1 table is as follows. Name Salary Start Stop ---- ------ ----- ---- Bob 60000 1993-01-01 1993-05-30 Bob 70000 1993-06-01 1993-12-31 Here is the example Employee2 table. Name Title Start Stop ---- ------ ----- ---- Bob Assistant Provost 1993-01-01 1993-09-30 Bob Provost 1993-10-01 1994-01-31 Bob Professor 1994-02-01 1994-12-31 With this change, getting the salary information for an employee is now easy. SELECT Salary, Start, Stop FROM Employee1 WHERE Name = 'Bob' But what if the OAP wants a table of salary, title intervals (that is, suppose the OAP wishes a table to be computed in the form of Figure 1)? One alternative is to print out two tables, and let the user fig­ ure out the combinations. A second alternative is to use SQL entirely. Unfortunately, this query must do a case analysis of how each row of Employee1 overlaps each row of Employee2; there are four possible cases. SELECT Employee1.Name, Salary, Dept, Employee1.Start, Employee1.Stop FROM Employee1, Employee2 WHERE Employee1.Name = Employee2.Name AND Employee2.Start <= Employee1.Start AND Employee1.Stop < Employee2.Stop UNION SELECT Employee1.Name, Salary, Dept, Employee1.Start, Employee2.Stop FROM Employee1, Employee2 WHERE Employee1.Name = Employee2.Name AND Employee1.Start >= Employee2.Start AND Employee2.Stop < Employee1.Stop AND Employee1.Start < Employee2.Stop UNION SELECT Employee1.Name, Salary, Dept, Employee2.Start, Employee1.Stop FROM Employee1, Employee2 WHERE Employee1.Name = Employee2.Name AND Employee2.Start > Employee1.Start AND Employee1.Stop < Employee2.Stop AND Employee2.Start < Employee1.Stop UNION SELECT Employee1.Name, Salary, Dept, Employee2.Start, Employee2.Stop FROM Employee1, Employee2 WHERE Employee1.Name = Employee2.Name AND Employee2.Start > Employee1.Start AND Employee2.Stop < Employee1.Stop Getting all the cases right is a challenging task. In TSQL2, perform­ ing a temporal join is just what one would expect. SELECT Employee1.Name, Salary, Dept FROM Employee1, Employee2 WHERE Employee1.Name = Employee2.Name 27.16.6. A CASE STUDY - AGGREGATES Now the OAP is asked, what is the maximum salary? Before adding time, this was easy. SELECT MAX(Salary) FROM Employee Now that the salary history is stored, we'd like a history of the max­ imum salary over time. The problem, of course, is that SQL does not provide temporal aggregates. The easy way to do this is to print out the information, and scan manually for the maximums. An alternative is to be tricky and convert the snapshot aggregate query into a non- aggregate query, then convert that into a temporal query. The non- aggregate query finds those salaries for which a greater salary does not exist. SELECT Salary FROM Employee AS E1 WHERE NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM Employee AS E2 WHERE E2.Salary > E1.Salary) Converting this query into a temporal query is far from obvious. The following is one approach. CREATE TABLE Temp (Salary, Start, Stop) AS SELECT Salary, Start, Stop FROM Employee; INSERT INTO Temp SELECT T.Salary, T.Start, E.Start FROM Temp AS T, Employee AS E WHERE E.Start >= T.Start AND E.Start < T.Stop AND E.Salary > T.Salary; INSERT INTO Temp SELECT T.Salary, T.Stop, E.Stop FROM Temp AS T, Employee AS E WHERE E.Stop > T.Start AND E.Stop <= T.Stop AND E.Salary > T.Salary; DELETE FROM Temp T WHERE EXISTS (SELECT * FROM Employee AS E WHERE ((T.Start => E.Start AND T.Start < E.Stop) OR (E.Start >= T.Start AND E.Start < T.Stop)) AND E.Salary > T.Salary; This approach creates an auxiliary table. We add to this table the lower period of a period subtraction and the upper period of a period subtraction. We then delete all periods that overlap with some row defined by the subquery, thereby effecting the NOT EXISTS. Finally we generate from the auxiliary table maximal periods, in the same way that the salary information was computed above. As one might imagine, such SQL code is extremely inefficient to execute, given the complex nested queries with inequality predicates. A third alternative is to use SQL as little as possible, and instead compute the desired maximum history in a host language using cursors. The query in TSQL2 is again straightforward and intuitive. SELECT MAX(Salary) FROM Employee 27.16.7. SUMMARY Time-varying data is manipulated in most database applications. Valid- time support is absent in SQL. Many common temporal queries are either difficult to simulate in SQL, or require embedding SQL in a procedural language, due to SQL's lack of support for valid-time tables in its data model and query constructs. Elsewhere, we showed that adding valid-time support requires few changes to the DBMS implementation, can dramatically simplify some queries and enable others, and can later enable optimizations in storage structures, indexing methods, and optimization strategies that can yield significant performance improvements. With a new part of SQL3 supporting time-varying information, we can begin to address such applications, enabling SQL3 to better manage temporal data. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Accredited Standards Committee* X3, Information Technology NEWS RELEASE Doc. No.: PR/96-0002 Reply to: Barbara Bennett at bbennett@itic.nw.dc.us X3 Announces the Approval of a New Project, ISO/IEC 9075 Part 7: SQL/Temporal Washington D.C., January 1996 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Accredited Standards Committee X3, Information Technology is announcing the approval of a new project on SQL/Temporal Support, ISO/IEC 9075 Part 7, with the work being done in Technical Committee X3H2, Database. The scope of this proposed standard specifies a new Part of the emerging SQL3 standard, e.g., Part 7, Temporal SQL, to be extensions to the SQL language supporting storage, retrieval, and manipulation of temporal data in an SQL database environment. The next X3H2 meeting is scheduled for March 11-14, 1996 in Kansas. Inquiries regarding this project should be sent to the Chairman of X3H2, Dr. Donald R. Deutsch, Sybase, Inc., Suite 800, 6550 Rock Spring Drive, Bethesda, MD 20817. Email: deutsch@sybase.com. An initial call for possible patents and other pertinent issues (copy­ rights, trademarks) is now being issued. Please submit information on these issues to the X3 Secretariat at 1250 Eye Street NW, Suite 200, Washington DC 20005. Email: x3sec@itic.nw.dc.us FAX: (202)638-4922. 27.17. Part 8 - ISO/ANSI SQL MULTIMEDIA (SQL/MM) A new ISO/IEC international standardization project for development of an SQL class library for multimedia applications was approved in early 1993. This new standardization activity, named SQL Multimedia (SQL/MM), will specify packages of SQL abstract data type (ADT) definitions using the facilities for ADT specification and invocation provided in the emerging SQL3 specification. SQL/MM intends to standardize class libraries for science and engineering, full-text and document processing, and methods for the management of multimedia objects such as image, sound, animation, music, and video. It will likely provide an SQL language binding for multimedia objects defined by other JTC1 standardization bodies (e.g. SC18 for documents, SC24 for images, and SC29 for photographs and motion pictures). The Project Plan for SQL/MM indicates that it will be a multi-part standard consisting of an evolving number of parts. Part 1 will be a Framework that specifies how the other parts are to be constructed. Each of the other parts will be devoted to a specific SQL application package. The following SQL/MM Part structure exists as of August 1994: · Part 1: Framework A non-technical description of how the document is structured. · Part 2: Full Text Methods and ADTs for text data processing. About 45 pages. · Part 3: Spatial Methods and ADTs for spatial data management. About 200 pages with active contributions from Spatial Data experts from 3 national bodies. · Part 4: General Purpose Methods and ADTs for complex numbers, Facilities include trig and exponential functions, vectors, sets, etc. Currently about 90 pages. There are a number of standards efforts in the area of Spatial and Geographic information: · ANSI X3L1 - Geographic Information Systems. Mark Ashworth of Unisys is the liason between X3L1 and ANSI X3H2. He is also the editor for parts 1, 3, and 4 of the SQL/MM draft. · ISO TC 211 - Geographic information/Geomatics 28. Technical support for PostgreSQL If you have any technical question or encounter any problem you can e- mail to: · pgsql-questions@postgresql.org · Newsgroup · Newsgroup · Newsgroup · Newsgroup · Newsgroup · Other Mailing lists and expect e-mail answer in less than a day. As the user-base of internet product is very vast, and users support other users, internet will be capable of giving technical support to billions of users easily. Email support is much more convenient than telephone support as you can cut and paste error messages, program output etc.. and easily transmit to mailing list/newsgroup. 28.1. Commercial Support PostgreSQL organisation is selling technical support to companies, the revenue generated will be used for maintaining several mirror sites (web and ftp) around the world. The revenue will also be used to produce printed documentation, guides, textbooks which will help the customers. They are at Another company called 'Great Bridge Corporation' is doing development, sales and support of PostgreSQL. They are at . It is a public company setup by 'Landmark Communications corp' and other venture capital firms to exclusively sell and support PostgreSQL to very large enterprises and corporations all over the world. You can also take help from professional consulting firms like RedHat, Anderson, WGS (Work Group Solutions). Contact them for help, since they have very good expertise in "C", "C++" (PostgreSQL is written in "C") - · Redhat Corp - Database consulting division · Work Group Solutions · Anderson Consulting 29. Economic and Business Aspects Commercial databases pay many taxes like federal, state, sales, employment, social security, medicare taxes, health care for employees, bunch of benefits for employees, marketing and advertisement costs. All these costs do not go directly for the development of the database and do not improve the quality or technology of the database. When you buy a commercial database, some portion of the amount goes for overheads like taxes, expenses and balance for database R&D costs. Also commercial databases have to pay for buildings/real-estates and purchase Unix machines, install and maintain them. All of these costs are passed onto customers. PostgreSQL has the advantage over commercial databases as there is no direct taxes since it is made on the internet. A very vast group of people contribute to the development of the PostgreSQL. For example, in a hypothetical case, if there are one million companies in U.S.A and each contribute about $ 10 (worth of software to PostgreSQL) then each and every company will get ten million dollars!! This is the GREAT MAGIC of software development on internet. Currently, PostgreSQL source code is about 2,50,000 lines of "C", "C++" code. If cost of each line of "C" code is $ 2 then the PostgreSQL is worth about $ 5,00,000 (half a million dollars!). Many companies already develop in-house vast amount of "C", "C++" code. Hence by taking in the source code of PostgreSQL and collaborating with other companies on internet will greatly benefit the company saving time and efforts. 30. List of Other Databases Listed below are other SQL databases for Unix, Linux. · Click and go to Applications->databases. · Click and go to Applications->databases. · Database resources This was written by Linas Vepstas: linas@fc.net · Free Database List · Browne's RDBMS List written by Christopher B. Browne cbbrowne@hex.net · SAL's List of Relational DBMS · SAL's List of Object-Oriented DBMS · SAL's List of Utilites and Other Databases · ACM SIGMOD Index of Publicly Available Database Software 31. Internet World Wide Web Searching Tips Internet is very vast and it has vast number of software and has a ocean of information underneath. It is growing at the rate of 300% annually world wide. It is estimated that there are about 10 million Web sites world wide! To search for a information you would use search engines like "Yahoo", "Netscape", "Lycos" etc. Go to Yahoo, click on search. Use filtering options to narrow down your search criteria. The default search action is "Intelligent search" which is more general and lists all possiblities. Click on "Options" to select "EXACT phrase" search, "AND" search, "OR" search, etc.. This way you would find the information you need much faster. Also in the search menu, there are radio-buttons for searching in Usenet, Web-sites and Yahoo sites. 32. Conclusion After researching all the available databases which are free and source code is available, it was found that ONLY PostgreSQL is the MOST mature, most widely used and robust RDBMS SQL free database (object relational) in the world. PostgreSQL is very appealing since lot of work had already been done. It has ODBC and JDBC drivers, using these it is possible to write applications independent of the databases. The applications written in PostgreSQL using ODBC, JDBC drivers are easily portable to other databases like Oracle, Sybase and Informix and vice versa. You may ask "But why PostgreSQL ?" The answer is, since it takes lot more time to develop a database system from scratch, it makes sense to pick up a database system which satisfies the following conditions - A database system · Whose source code is available - Must be a 'Open Source Code' system · Has no license strings, no ownership strings attached to it · Which can be distributed on internet · Which had been on development for several years. · Which satisfies standards like ISO/ANSI SQL 92 (and SQL 89) · Which can satisfy future needs like SQL 3 (SQL 98) · Which has advanced capabilities And it just happens to be 'PostgreSQL' which satisfies all these conditions and is an appropriate software for this situation. You may say 'PostgreSQL' is a very strange name. But my argument is - why change the name. This world is stuck with "PostgreSQL" forever!! 33. FAQ - Questions on PostgreSQL Please refer to the latest version of FAQ for General, Linux and Irix at · 34. Other Formats of this Document This document is published in 11 different formats namely - DVI, Postscript, Latex, Adobe Acrobat PDF, LyX, GNU-info, HTML, RTF(Rich Text Format), Plain-text, Unix man pages and SGML. · You can get this HOWTO document as a single file tar ball in HTML, DVI, Postscript or SGML formats from - · Plain text format is in: · Translations to other languages like French, German, Spanish, Chinese, Japanese are in Any help from you to translate to other languages is welcome. The document is written using a tool called "SGML-Tools" which can be got from - Compiling the source you will get the following commands like · sgml2html databasehowto.sgml (to generate html file) · sgml2rtf databasehowto.sgml (to generate RTF file) · sgml2latex databasehowto.sgml (to generate latex file) LaTeX documents may be converted into PDF files simply by producing a Postscript output using sgml2latex ( and dvips) and running the output through the Acrobat distill ( ) command as follows: ______________________________________________________________________ bash$ man sgml2latex bash$ sgml2latex filename.sgml bash$ man dvips bash$ dvips -o filename.ps filename.dvi bash$ distill filename.ps bash$ man ghostscript bash$ man ps2pdf bash$ ps2pdf input.ps output.pdf bash$ acroread output.pdf & ______________________________________________________________________ Or you can use Ghostscript command ps2pdf. ps2pdf is a work-alike for nearly all the functionality of Adobe's Acrobat Distiller product: it converts PostScript files to Portable Document Format (PDF) files. ps2pdf is implemented as a very small command script (batch file) that invokes Ghostscript, selecting a special "output device" called pdfwrite. In order to use ps2pdf, the pdfwrite device must be included in the makefile when Ghostscript was compiled; see the documentation on building Ghostscript for details. This howto document is located at - · Also you can find this document at the following mirrors sites - · · · · · Other mirror sites near you (network-address-wise) can be found at select a site and go to directory /LDP/HOWTO/PostgreSQL-HOWTO.html In order to view the document in dvi format, use the xdvi program. The xdvi program is located in tetex-xdvi*.rpm package in Redhat Linux which can be located through ControlPanel | Applications | Publishing | TeX menu buttons. To read dvi document give the command - xdvi -geometry 80x90 howto.dvi man xdvi And resize the window with mouse. To navigate use Arrow keys, Page Up, Page Down keys, also you can use 'f', 'd', 'u', 'c', 'l', 'r', 'p', 'n' letter keys to move up, down, center, next page, previous page etc. To turn off expert menu press 'x'. You can read postscript file using the program 'gv' (ghostview) or The ghostscript program is in ghostscript*.rpm package and gv program is in gv*.rpm package in Redhat Linux which can be located through ControlPanel | Applications | Graphics menu buttons. The gv program is much more user friendly than ghostscript. Also ghostscript and gv are available on other platforms like OS/2, Windows 95 and NT, you view this document even on those platforms. · Get ghostscript for Windows 95, OS/2, and for all OSes from To read postscript document give the command - gv howto.ps ghostscript howto.ps CAUTION: This document is large, total number of pages (postscript) if printed will be approximately 113 pages. You can read HTML format document using Netscape Navigator, Microsoft Internet explorer, Redhat Baron Web browser or any of the 10 other web browsers. You can read the latex, LyX output using LyX a X-Windows front end to latex. 35. Copyright and License Copyright Al Dev (Alavoor Vasudevan) 1997-2000. License policy is GNU/GPL as per LDP (Linux Documentation project). LDP is a GNU/GPL project. Additional restrictions are - you must retain the author's name, email address and this copyright notice on all the copies. If you make any changes or additions to this document then you should intimate all the authors of this document. NO LIABILITY FOR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES. In no event shall the author/authors of this document be liable for any damages whatsoever (including without limitation, special, incidental, consequential, or direct/indirect damages for personal injury, loss of business profits, business interruption, loss of business information, or any other pecuniary loss) arising out of the use of this document. Author/authors offers no warranties or guarantees on fitness, usability, merchantability of this document. Brands, companies and product names mentioned in this document are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. Please refer to individual copyright notices of brands, companies and products mentioned in this document. It is your responsibility to read and understand the copyright notices of the organisations/companies/products/authors mentioned in this document before using their respective information. AJ. Appendix A - Syntax of ANSI/ISO SQL 1992 This file contains a depth-first tree traversal of the BNF for the language done at about 27-AUG-1992 11:03:41.64. The specific version of the BNF included here is: ANSI-only, SQL2-only. ::= | ::= | | ::= | ::= A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z ::= a | b | c | d | e | f | g | h | i | j | k | l | m | n | o | p | q | r | s | t | u | v | w | x | y | z ::= 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 ::= | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | ::= !! (space character in character set in use) ::= " ::= % ::= & ::= ' ::= ( ::= ) ::= * ::= + ::= , ::= - ::= . ::= / ::= : ::= ; ::= < ::= = ::= > ::= ? ::= _ ::= | ::= | ::= [ ::= ] ::= | ::= | | | | | ::= ::= [ ( | )... ] ::= (!! See the Syntax Rules) ::= | ::= | ::= ABSOLUTE | ACTION | ADD | ALL | ALLOCATE | ALTER | AND | ANY | ARE | AS | ASC | ASSERTION | AT | AUTHORIZATION | AVG | BEGIN | BETWEEN | BIT | BIT_LENGTH | BOTH | BY | CASCADE | CASCADED | CASE | CAST | CATALOG | CHAR | CHARACTER | CHAR_LENGTH | CHARACTER_LENGTH | CHECK | CLOSE | COALESCE | COLLATE | COLLATION | COLUMN | COMMIT | CONNECT | CONNECTION | CONSTRAINT | CONSTRAINTS | CONTINUE | CONVERT | CORRESPONDING | COUNT | CREATE | CROSS | CURRENT | CURRENT_DATE | CURRENT_TIME | CURRENT_TIMESTAMP | CURRENT_USER | CURSOR | DATE | DAY | DEALLOCATE | DEC | DECIMAL | DECLARE | DEFAULT | DEFERRABLE | DEFERRED | DELETE | DESC | DESCRIBE | DESCRIPTOR | DIAGNOSTICS | DISCONNECT | DISTINCT | DOMAIN | DOUBLE | DROP | ELSE | END | END-EXEC | ESCAPE | EXCEPT | EXCEPTION | EXEC | EXECUTE | EXISTS | EXTERNAL | EXTRACT | FALSE | FETCH | FIRST | FLOAT | FOR | FOREIGN | FOUND | FROM | FULL | GET | GLOBAL | GO | GOTO | GRANT | GROUP | HAVING | HOUR | IDENTITY | IMMEDIATE | IN | INDICATOR | INITIALLY | INNER | INPUT | INSENSITIVE | INSERT | INT | INTEGER | INTERSECT | INTERVAL | INTO | IS | ISOLATION | JOIN | KEY | LANGUAGE | LAST | LEADING | LEFT | LEVEL | LIKE | LOCAL | LOWER | MATCH | MAX | MIN | MINUTE | MODULE | MONTH | NAMES | NATIONAL | NATURAL | NCHAR | NEXT | NO | NOT | NULL | NULLIF | NUMERIC | OCTET_LENGTH | OF | ON | ONLY | OPEN | OPTION | OR | ORDER | OUTER | OUTPUT | OVERLAPS | PAD | PARTIAL | POSITION | PRECISION | PREPARE | PRESERVE | PRIMARY | PRIOR | PRIVILEGES | PROCEDURE | PUBLIC | READ | REAL | REFERENCES | RELATIVE | RESTRICT | REVOKE | RIGHT | ROLLBACK | ROWS | SCHEMA | SCROLL | SECOND | SECTION | SELECT | SESSION | SESSION_USER | SET | SIZE | SMALLINT | SOME | SPACE | SQL | SQLCODE | SQLERROR | SQLSTATE | SUBSTRING | SUM | SYSTEM_USER | TABLE | TEMPORARY | THEN | TIME | TIMESTAMP | TIMEZONE_HOUR | TIMEZONE_MINUTE | TO | TRAILING | TRANSACTION | TRANSLATE | TRANSLATION | TRIM | TRUE | UNION | UNIQUE | UNKNOWN | UPDATE | UPPER | USAGE | USER | USING | VALUE | VALUES | VARCHAR | VARYING | VIEW | WHEN | WHENEVER | WHERE | WITH | WORK | WRITE | YEAR | ZONE ::= ADA | C | CATALOG_NAME | CHARACTER_SET_CATALOG | CHARACTER_SET_NAME | CHARACTER_SET_SCHEMA | CLASS_ORIGIN | COBOL | COLLATION_CATALOG | COLLATION_NAME | COLLATION_SCHEMA | COLUMN_NAME | COMMAND_FUNCTION | COMMITTED | CONDITION_NUMBER | CONNECTION_NAME | CONSTRAINT_CATALOG | CONSTRAINT_NAME | CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA | CURSOR_NAME | DATA | DATETIME_INTERVAL_CODE | DATETIME_INTERVAL_PRECISION | DYNAMIC_FUNCTION | FORTRAN | LENGTH | MESSAGE_LENGTH | MESSAGE_OCTET_LENGTH | MESSAGE_TEXT | MORE | MUMPS | NAME | NULLABLE | NUMBER | PASCAL | PLI | REPEATABLE | RETURNED_LENGTH | RETURNED_OCTET_LENGTH | RETURNED_SQLSTATE | ROW_COUNT | SCALE | SCHEMA_NAME | SERIALIZABLE | SERVER_NAME | SUBCLASS_ORIGIN | TABLE_NAME | TYPE | UNCOMMITTED | UNNAMED ::= | ::= [ [ ] ] | ::= ... ::= E ::= ::= ::= [ ] ::= | ::= N [ ... ] [ ( ... [ ... ] )... ] ::= | ::= !! (See the Syntax Rules.) ::= ::= ( | | )... ::= [ ... ] ::= [...] ::= | ::= !! (implementation-defined end-of-line indicator) ::= B [ ... ] [ ( ... [ ... ] )... ] ::= 0 | 1 ::= X [ ... ] [ ( ... [ ... ] )... ] ::= | A | B | C | D | E | F | a | b | c | d | e | f ::= | |