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  2. MySQL Federated - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MySQL_Federated

    It uses the MySQL client library API as a data transport, treating remote tables as if they were located on the local server. Each Federated table that is defined there is one .frm (data definition file containing information such as the URL of the data source). The actual data can exist on a local or remote MySQL instance.

  3. Shadow table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadow_table

    With shadow tables, one could create an empty "shadow table" of that table and use a program that inserts a copy of a row into the shadow table every time that row gets deleted from the primary table. After 50 days using the shadow table system in the worst-case scenario, there would be one copy of the primary table, assuming every row in the ...

  4. Database normalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_normalization

    In all these cases, however, the database designer does not have to perform 6NF normalization manually by creating separate tables. Some DBMSs that are specialized for warehousing, such as Sybase IQ , use columnar storage by default, but the designer still sees only a single multi-column table.

  5. Comparison of database administration tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_database...

    Create/alter table: Yes - can create table, alter its definition and data, and add new rows; Some - can only create/alter table definition, not data; Browse table: Yes - can browse table definition and data; Some - can only browse table definition; Multi-server support: Yes - can manage from the same window/session multiple servers

  6. Comparison of MySQL database engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_MySQL...

    This is a comparison between notable database engines for the MySQL database management system (DBMS). A database engine (or "storage engine") is the underlying software component that a DBMS uses to create, read, update and delete (CRUD) data from a database.

  7. Join (SQL) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Join_(SQL)

    [2] [3] [4] A function in an SQL Where clause can result in the database ignoring relatively compact table indexes. The database may read and inner join the selected columns from both tables before reducing the number of rows using the filter that depends on a calculated value, resulting in a relatively enormous amount of inefficient processing.

  8. Comparison of relational database management systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_relational...

    Note (3): "For other than InnoDB storage engines, MySQL Server parses and ignores the FOREIGN KEY and REFERENCES syntax in CREATE TABLE statements. The CHECK clause is parsed but ignored by all storage engines." [73] Note (4): Support for Unicode is new in version 10.0. Note (5): MySQL provides GUI interface through MySQL Workbench.

  9. Distributed SQL - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_SQL

    relational database front end structure – meaning data represented as tables with rows and columns similar to any other RDBMS; automatically sharded data storage; underlying key–value storage [7] [1] native SQL implementation; Following the CAP Theorem, distributed SQL databases are "CP" or consistent and partition-tolerant. Algorithmically ...