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IBM DB2 9.7 Advanced Application Developer Cookbook

You're reading from   IBM DB2 9.7 Advanced Application Developer Cookbook This cookbook is essential reading for every ambitious IBM DB2 application developer. With over 70 practical recipes, it will help you master the most sophisticated elements and techniques used in designing high quality DB2 applications.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849683968
Length 442 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

IBM DB2 9.7 Advanced Application Developer Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Application Development Enhancements in DB2 9.7 FREE CHAPTER 2. DB2 Application Techniques 3. General Application Design 4. Procedures, Functions, Triggers, and Modules 5. Designing Java Applications 6. DB2 9.7 Application Enablement 7. Advanced DB2 Application Features and Practices 8. Preparing and Monitoring Database Applications 9. Advanced Performance Tuning Tips

Using the ALTER TABLE operation in a single transaction


When we perform the ALTER TABLE operations, such as dropping a column, in earlier versions of DB2, modifying the data types would force the database administrator to perform REORG on the table before any application would work on the table. Now in DB2 9.7, one can perform an unlimited number of table alterations within a single unit of work. This will allow a data modeler to manage the alteration of the column easily.

Getting ready

By default, autocommit is ON in DB2. That means each SQL statement we execute is a unit of work or a transaction. There are many ways to execute the unit of work; the simplest one is to turn off autocommit, or use db2 + c at the beginning, or use atomic procedures.

The different options available for the DB2 command can be listed using the following command:

C:\>db2 "? options"
db2 [option ...] [db2-command | sql-statement |
            [? [phrase | message | sqlstate | class-code]]]
option: -a, -c, -d, -e{c|s}, -finfile, -i, -lhistfile, -m, -n, -o,
           -p, -q, -rreport, -s, -t, -td;, -v, -w, -x, -zoutputfile.
Option 		Description 				Default Setting
------ 		---------------------------------------- 		---------------
-a 		Display SQLCA 				OFF
-c 		Auto-commit 				ON

How to do it...

In this section, we'll see how multiple ALTER TABLE operations are allowed in three different units of work. This can be implemented in any language, but the user must have privileges to alter a table.

For demonstration purposes, we have created the EMPLOYEEE table, which is a replica of EMPLOYEE of the sample database without the dependent objects. If there are dependent objects, we may have to drop them and perform the ALTER TABLE statement.

  1. 1. Set autocommit to ON: This is the default behavior for the DB2 prompt, but it can be explicitly specified as follows:

    C:\>db2 +c
    
  2. 2. Alter a table: Since autocommit is set to ON, it means that every statement executed is a transaction in itself. We will alter the same table in different transactions.

    ALTER TABLE EMPLOYEEE DROP COLUMN SALARY
    ALTER TABLE EMPLOYEEE ALTER COLUMN EDLEVEL DROP NOT NULL
    ALTER TABLE EMPLOYEEE DROP COLUMN SEX
    
    
  3. 3. Reorganize the table: Since we have dropped some columns from the table, the table goes into the REORG PENDING state. To bring the table out of the REORG PENDING state, we can use the REORG command as follows:

REORG TABLE EMPLOYEEE

The following screenshot shows the sample output for the preceding statements:

How it works…

When a table is altered with operations, such as dropping a column, altering a column data type, or altering the nullability feature of a column, the table may be placed in a REORG PENDING state. While the table is in the REORG state, no queries can be run until the table is brought online from the REORG PENDING state by executing the REORG command. Starting with DB2 9.7, one can perform an unlimited number of ALTER TABLE statements in a single transaction with a maximum of three transactions in a row before the need for table reorganization. This reduces the maintenance window requirement, in the case of a huge data warehouse environment.

You have been reading a chapter from
IBM DB2 9.7 Advanced Application Developer Cookbook
Published in: Mar 2012
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781849683968
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