Oracle metadata
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The ORACLE application server and Oracle relational database
keep metadata
in two areas: data dictionary tables (accessed by built-in functions) and a metadata registry.
The global built-in functions accessing Oracle RDBMS
data dictionary tables are:
- ALL_TABLES - list of all tables in the current database that are accessible to the current user
- ALL_TAB_COLUMNS - list of all columns in the database that are accessible to the current user
- ALL_ARGUMENTS - lists the arguments of functions and procedures that are accessible to the current user
- ALL_ERRORS - lists descriptions of errors on all stored objects
(views, procedures, functions, packages, and package bodies) that are
accessible to the current user
- ALL_OBJECT_SIZE - included for backward compatibility with Oracle version 5
- ALL_PROCEDURES - (from Oracle 9 onwards) lists all functions and
procedures (along with associated properties) that are accessible to
the current user
- ALL_SOURCE - describes the text (i.e. PL/SQL) source of the stored objects accessible to the current user
In addition there are equivalent functions prefixed "USER_" which
show only the objects owned by the current user (i.e. a more restricted
view of metadata) and prefixed "DBA_" which show all objects in the
database (i.e. an unrestricted global view of metadata for the database
instance). Naturally the "DBA_" metadata functions require DBA
privileges.
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Example 1: finding tables
Find all Tables that have PATTERN in the table name and are not backup or temporary tables
SELECT
TABLE_NAME
FROM
ALL_TABLES
WHERE
TABLE_NAME LIKE '%PATTERN%'
ORDER
BY TABLE_NAME;
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Example 2: finding columns
Find all tables that have at least one column that matches a specific PATTERN in the column name
SELECT
TABLE_NAME,
COLUMN_NAME
FROM
ALL_TAB_COLUMNS
WHERE
COLUMN_NAME LIKE '%PATTERN%';
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Example 3: counting rows of columns
Count the total number of rows in all tables containing a column name that matches PATTERN ==
COLUMN DUMMY NOPRINT
COMPUTE SUM OF NUM_ROWS ON DUMMY
BREAK ON DUMMY
SELECT
NULL DUMMY,
T.TABLE_NAME,
C.COLUMN_NAME,
T.NUM_ROWS
FROM
ALL_TABLES T,
ALL_TAB_COLUMNS C
WHERE
T.TABLE_NAME = C.TABLE_NAME
AND C.COLUMN_NAME LIKE '%PATTERN%'
ORDER BY T.TABLE_NAME;
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Use of underscore in table and column names
The underscore is a special SQL
pattern match to a single character and should be escaped if you are in
fact looking for an underscore character in the LIKE clause of a query.
Just add the following after a LIKE statement:
ESCAPE '_'
And then each literal underscore should be a double underscore: __
Example
LIKE '%__G' ESCAPE '_'
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Oracle Metadata Registry
The Oracle product Oracle Enterprise Metadata Manager
(EMM) is an ISO/IEC 11179
compatible metadata registry
. It stores administered metadata in a consistent format that can be used for metadata publishing
. As of January 2006, EMM is available only through Oracle consulting services.
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See also
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External links
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