Application Design and Development
Application Design and Development
Development
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.2 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
User Interfaces and Tools
Most database users do not use a query language like
SQL.
Forms
Graphical user interfaces
Report generators
Data analysis tools (see Chapter 18)
Many interfaces are Web-based
Back-end (Web server) uses such technologies as
Java servlets
Java Server Pages (JSP)
Active Server Pages (ASP)
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.3 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
The World Wide Web
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.4 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
A formatted report
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.5 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Web Interfaces to Databases
Why interface databases to the Web?
1. Web browsers have become the de-facto standard user
interface to databases
Enable large numbers of users to access databases
from anywhere
Avoid the need for downloading/installing specialized
code, while providing a good graphical user interface
Examples: banks, airline and rental car reservations,
university course registration and grading, an so on.
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.6 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Web Interfaces to Database (Cont.)
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.7 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Uniform Resources Locators
In the Web, functionality of pointers is provided by Uniform
Resource Locators (URLs).
URL example:
http://www.bell-labs.com/topics/book/db-book
The first part indicates how the document is to be
accessed
“http” indicates that the document is to be accessed
using the Hyper Text Transfer Protocol.
The second part gives the unique name of a machine on
the Internet.
The rest of the URL identifies the document within the
machine.
The local identification can be:
The path name of a file on the machine, or
An identifier (path name) of a program, plus arguments
to be passed to the program
– E.g. http://www.google.com/search?q=silberschatz
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.8 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
HTML and HTTP
HTML provides formatting, hypertext link, and image
display features.
HTML also provides input features
Select from a set of options
– Pop-up menus, radio buttons, check lists
Enter values
– Text boxes
Filled in input sent back to the server, to be acted
upon by an executable at the server
HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP) used for
communication with the Web server
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.9 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Sample HTML Source Text
<html> <body>
<table border cols = 3>
<tr> <td> A-101 </td> <td> Downtown </td> <td> 500 </td>
</tr>
…
</table>
<center> The <i>account</i> relation </center>
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.10 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Display of Sample HTML Source
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.11 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Client Side Scripting and Applets
Browsers can fetch certain scripts (client-side scripts) or
programs along with documents, and execute them in
“safe mode” at the client site
Javascript
Macromedia Flash and Shockwave for
animation/games
VRML
Applets
Client-side scripts/programs allow documents to be active
E.g., animation by executing programs at the local site
E.g. ensure that values entered by users satisfy some
correctness checks
Permit flexible interaction with the user.
Executing programs at the client site speeds up
interaction by avoiding many round trips to server
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.12 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Client Side Scripting and Security
Security mechanisms needed to ensure that malicious
scripts do not cause damage to the client machine
Easy for limited capability scripting languages,
harder for general purpose programming languages
like Java
E.g. Java’s security system ensures that the Java applet
code does not make any system calls directly
Disallows dangerous actions such as file writes
Notifies the user about potentially dangerous
actions, and allows the option to abort the program
or to continue execution.
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.13 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Web Servers
A Web server can easily serve as a front end to a
variety of information services.
The document name in a URL may identify an
executable program, that, when run, generates a HTML
document.
When a HTTP server receives a request for such a
document, it executes the program, and sends back
the HTML document that is generated.
The Web client can pass extra arguments with the
name of the document.
To install a new service on the Web, one simply needs
to create and install an executable that provides that
service.
The Web browser provides a graphical user
interface to the information service.
Common Gateway Interface (CGI): a standard interface
between web and application server
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.14 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Three-Tier Web Architecture
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Two-Tier Web Architecture
Multiple levels of indirection have overheads
Alternative: two-tier architecture
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.16 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
HTTP and Sessions
The HTTP protocol is connectionless
That is, once the server replies to a request, the
server closes the connection with the client, and
forgets all about the request
In contrast, Unix logins, and JDBC/ODBC connections
stay connected until the client disconnects
retaining user authentication and other
information
Motivation: reduces load on server
operating systems have tight limits on number of
open connections on a machine
Information services need session information
E.g. user authentication should be done only once per
session
Solution: use a cookie
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.17 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Sessions and Cookies
A cookie is a small piece of text containing identifying
information
Sent by server to browser on first interaction
Sent by browser to the server that created the
cookie on further interactions
part of the HTTP protocol
Server saves information about cookies it issued, and
can use it when serving a request
E.g., authentication information, and user
preferences
Cookies can be stored permanently or for a limited time
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.18 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Servlets
Java Servlet specification defines an API for
communication between the Web server and application
program
E.g. methods to get parameter values and to send HTML
text back to client
Application program (also called a servlet) is loaded into
the Web server
Two-tier model
Each request spawns a new thread in the Web server
thread is closed once the request is serviced
Servlet API provides a getSession() method
Sets a cookie on first interaction with browser, and uses
it to identify session on further interactions
Provides methods to store and look-up per-session
information
E.g. user name, preferences, ..
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.19 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Example Servlet Code
Public class BankQuery(Servlet extends HttpServlet {
public void doGet(HttpServletRequest request,
HttpServletResponse result)
throws ServletException, IOException {
String type = request.getParameter(“type”);
String number = request.getParameter(“number”);
…code to find the loan amount/account balance …
…using JDBC to communicate with the database..
…we assume the value is stored in the variable balance
result.setContentType(“text/html”);
PrintWriter out = result.getWriter( );
out.println(“<HEAD><TITLE>Query
Result</TITLE></HEAD>”);
out.println(“<BODY>”);
out.println(“Balance on “ + type + number + “=“ +
balance);
out.println(“</BODY>”);
out.close ( );
}
}
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.20 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Server-Side Scripting
Server-side scripting simplifies the task of connecting a
database to the Web
Define a HTML document with embedded executable
code/SQL queries.
Input values from HTML forms can be used directly in
the embedded code/SQL queries.
When the document is requested, the Web server
executes the embedded code/SQL queries to
generate the actual HTML document.
Numerous server-side scripting languages
JSP, Server-side Javascript, ColdFusion Markup
Language (cfml), PHP, Jscript
General purpose scripting languages: VBScript, Perl,
Python
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.21 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Improving Web Server Performance
Performance is an issue for popular Web sites
May be accessed by millions of users every day,
thousands of requests per second at peak time
Caching techniques used to reduce cost of serving
pages by exploiting commonalities between requests
At the server site:
Caching of JDBC connections between servlet
requests
Caching results of database queries
– Cached results must be updated if underlying
database changes
Caching of generated HTML
At the client’s network
Caching of pages by Web proxy
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.22 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Triggers
A trigger is a statement that is executed automatically
by the system as a side effect of a modification to the
database.
To design a trigger mechanism, we must:
Specify the conditions under which the trigger is to
be executed.
Specify the actions to be taken when the trigger
executes.
Triggers introduced to SQL standard in SQL:1999, but
supported even earlier using non-standard syntax by
most databases.
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.23 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Trigger Example
Suppose that instead of allowing negative account
balances, the bank deals with overdrafts by
setting the account balance to zero
creating a loan in the amount of the overdraft
giving this loan a loan number identical to the
account number of the overdrawn account
The condition for executing the trigger is an update to
the account relation that results in a negative balance
value.
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.24 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Trigger Example in SQL:1999
create trigger overdraft-trigger after update on account
referencing new row as nrow
for each row
when nrow.balance < 0
begin atomic
insert into borrower
(select customer-name, account-number
from depositor
where nrow.account-number =
depositor.account-number);
insert into loan values
(n.row.account-number, nrow.branch-name,
– nrow.balance );
update account set balance = 0
where account.account-number = nrow.account-
number
end
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.25 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Triggering Events and Actions in
SQL
Triggering event can be insert, delete or update
Triggers on update can be restricted to specific attributes
E.g. create trigger overdraft-trigger after update of
balance on account
Values of attributes before and after an update can be
referenced
referencing old row as : for deletes and updates
referencing new row as : for inserts and updates
Triggers can be activated before an event, which can serve
as extra constraints. E.g. convert blanks to null.
create trigger setnull-trigger before update on r
referencing new row as nrow
for each row
when nrow.phone-number = ‘ ‘
set nrow.phone-number = null
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.26 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Statement Level Triggers
Instead of executing a separate action for each affected
row, a single action can be executed for all rows
affected by a transaction
Use for each statement instead of for each
row
Use referencing old table or referencing new
table to refer to temporary tables (called transition
tables) containing the affected rows
Can be more efficient when dealing with SQL
statements that update a large number of rows
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.27 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
External World Actions
We sometimes require external world actions to be triggered on a
database update
E.g. re-ordering an item whose quantity in a warehouse has
become small, or turning on an alarm light,
Triggers cannot be used to directly implement external-world
actions, BUT
Triggers can be used to record actions-to-be-taken in a separate
table
Have an external process that repeatedly scans the table, carries
out external-world actions and deletes action from table
E.g. Suppose a warehouse has the following tables
inventory (item, level ): How much of each item is in the
warehouse
minlevel (item, level ) : What is the minimum desired level of
each item
reorder (item, amount ): What quantity should we re-order at a
time
orders (item, amount ) : Orders to be placed (read by external
process)
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.28 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
External World Actions (Cont.)
create trigger reorder-trigger after update of amount on
inventory
referencing old row as orow, new row as nrow
for each row
when nrow.level < = (select level
from minlevel
where minlevel.item = orow.item)
and orow.level > (select level
from minlevel
where minlevel.item =
orow.item)
begin
insert into orders
(select item, amount
from reorder
where reorder.item = orow.item)
end
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.29 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Triggers in MS-SQLServer Syntax
create trigger overdraft-trigger on account
for update
as
if inserted.balance < 0
begin
insert into borrower
(select customer-name,account-number
from depositor, inserted
where inserted.account-number =
depositor.account-number)
insert into loan values
(inserted.account-number, inserted.branch-name,
– inserted.balance)
update account set balance = 0
from account, inserted
where account.account-number = inserted.account-
number
end
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.30 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
When Not To Use Triggers
Triggers were used earlier for tasks such as
maintaining summary data (e.g. total salary of each
department)
Replicating databases by recording changes to special
relations (called change or delta relations) and having a
separate process that applies the changes over to a
replica
There are better ways of doing these now:
Databases today provide built in materialized view
facilities to maintain summary data
Databases provide built-in support for replication
Encapsulation facilities can be used instead of triggers in
many cases
Define methods to update fields
Carry out actions as part of the update methods instead of
through a trigger
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.31 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Authorization in SQL (see also Section
4.3)
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.32 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Authorization (Cont.)
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Authorization and Views
Users can be given authorization on views, without
being given any authorization on the relations used in
the view definition
Ability of views to hide data serves both to simplify
usage of the system and to enhance security by allowing
users access only to data they need for their job
A combination or relational-level security and view-level
security can be used to limit a user’s access to
precisely the data that user needs.
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.34 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
View Example
Suppose a bank clerk needs to know the names of the
customers of each branch, but is not authorized to see
specific loan information.
Approach: Deny direct access to the loan relation,
but grant access to the view cust-loan, which
consists only of the names of customers and the
branches at which they have a loan.
The cust-loan view is defined in SQL as follows:
create view cust-loan as
select branchname, customer-name
from borrower, loan
where borrower.loan-number = loan.loan-
number
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.35 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
View Example (Cont.)
The clerk is authorized to see the result of the query:
select *
from cust-loan
When the query processor translates the result into a
query on the actual relations in the database, we obtain
a query on borrower and loan.
Authorization must be checked on the clerk’s query
before query processing replaces a view by the
definition of the view.
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.36 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Authorization on Views
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.37 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Granting of Privileges
The passage of authorization from one user to another
may be represented by an authorization graph.
The nodes of this graph are the users.
The root of the graph is the database administrator.
Consider graph for update authorization on loan.
An edge Ui Uj indicates that user Ui has granted
update authorization on loan to Uj.
U1 U4
DBA U2 U5
U3
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.38 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Authorization Grant Graph
Requirement: All edges in an authorization graph must be
part of some path originating with the database
administrator
If DBA revokes grant from U1:
Grant must be revoked from U4 since U1 no longer has
authorization
Grant must not be revoked from U5 since U5 has another
authorization path from DBA through U2
Must prevent cycles of grants with no path from the root:
DBA grants authorization to U7
U7 grants authorization to U8
U8 grants authorization to U7
DBA revokes authorization from U7
Must revoke grant U7 to U8 and from U8 to U7 since there is
no path from DBA to U7 or to U8 anymore.
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.39 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Security Specification in SQL
The grant statement is used to confer authorization
grant <privilege list>
on <relation name or view name> to <user list>
<user list> is:
a user-id
public, which allows all valid users the privilege
granted
A role (more on this later)
Granting a privilege on a view does not imply granting
any privileges on the underlying relations.
The grantor of the privilege must already hold the
privilege on the specified item (or be the database
administrator).
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.40 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Privileges in SQL
select: allows read access to relation,or the ability to query
using the view
Example: grant users U1, U2, and U3 select authorization
on the branch relation:
grant select on branch to U1, U2, U3
insert: the ability to insert tuples
update: the ability to update using the SQL update
statement
delete: the ability to delete tuples.
references: ability to declare foreign keys when creating
relations.
usage: In SQL-92; authorizes a user to use a specified
domain
all privileges: used as a short form for all the allowable
privileges
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.41 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Privilege To Grant Privileges
with grant option: allows a user who is granted a
privilege to pass the privilege on to other users.
Example:
grant select on branch to U1 with grant option
gives U1 the select privileges on branch and allows
U1 to grant this
privilege to others
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.42 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Roles
Roles permit common privileges for a class of users can be
specified just once by creating a corresponding “role”
Privileges can be granted to or revoked from roles, just like
user
Roles can be assigned to users, and even to other roles
SQL:1999 supports roles
create role teller
create role manager
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.43 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Revoking Authorization in SQL
The revoke statement is used to revoke authorization.
revoke<privilege list>
on <relation name or view name> from <user list>
[restrict|cascade]
Example:
revoke select on branch from U1, U2, U3 cascade
Revocation of a privilege from a user may cause other
users also to lose that privilege; referred to as
cascading of the revoke.
We can prevent cascading by specifying restrict:
revoke select on branch from U1, U2, U3 restrict
With restrict, the revoke command fails if cascading
revokes are required.
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.44 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Revoking Authorization in SQL
(Cont.)
<privilege-list> may be all to revoke all privileges the
revokee may hold.
If <revokee-list> includes public all users lose the
privilege except those granted it explicitly.
If the same privilege was granted twice to the same
user by different grantees, the user may retain the
privilege after the revocation.
All privileges that depend on the privilege being revoked
are also revoked.
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.45 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Limitations of SQL Authorization
SQL does not support authorization at a tuple level
E.g. we cannot restrict students to see only (the tuples
storing) their own grades
With the growth in Web access to databases, database accesses
come primarily from application servers.
End users don't have database user ids, they are all mapped
to the same database user id
All end-users of an application (such as a web application) may
be mapped to a single database user
The task of authorization in above cases falls on the application
program, with no support from SQL
Benefit: fine grained authorizations, such as to individual
tuples, can be implemented by the application.
Drawback: Authorization must be done in application code,
and may be dispersed all over an application
Checking for absence of authorization loopholes becomes
very difficult since it requires reading large amounts of
application code
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.46 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Audit Trails
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.47 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Application Security
Data may be encrypted when database authorization
provisions do not offer sufficient protection.
Properties of good encryption technique:
Relatively simple for authorized users to encrypt and
decrypt data.
Encryption scheme depends not on the secrecy of
the algorithm but on the secrecy of a parameter of
the algorithm called the encryption key.
Extremely difficult for an intruder to determine the
encryption key.
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.48 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Encryption (Cont.)
Data Encryption Standard (DES) substitutes characters and
rearranges their order on the basis of an encryption key which is
provided to authorized users via a secure mechanism. Scheme is
no more secure than the key transmission mechanism since the
key has to be shared.
Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) is a new standard replacing
DES, and is based on the Rijndael algorithm, but is also
dependent on shared secret keys
Public-key encryption is based on each user having two keys:
public key – publicly published key used to encrypt data, but
cannot be used to decrypt data
private key -- key known only to individual user, and used to
decrypt data.
Need not be transmitted to the site doing encryption.
Encryption scheme is such that it is impossible or extremely hard
to decrypt data given only the public key.
The RSA public-key encryption scheme is based on the hardness
of factoring a very large number (100's of digits) into its prime
components.
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.49 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Authentication
Password based authentication is widely used, but is
susceptible to sniffing on a network
Challenge-response systems avoid transmission of
passwords
DB sends a (randomly generated) challenge string to user
User encrypts string and returns result.
DB verifies identity by decrypting result
Can use public-key encryption system by DB sending a
message encrypted using user’s public key, and user
decrypting and sending the message back
Digital signatures are used to verify authenticity of data
E.g. use private key (in reverse) to encrypt data, and
anyone can verify authenticity by using public key (in
reverse) to decrypt data. Only holder of private key could
have created the encrypted data.
Digital signatures also help ensure nonrepudiation: sender
cannot later claim to have not created the data
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.50 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
Digital Certificates
Digital certificates are used to verify authenticity of public keys.
Problem: when you communicate with a web site, how do you
know if you are talking with the genuine web site or an imposter?
Solution: use the public key of the web site
Problem: how to verify if the public key itself is genuine?
Solution:
Every client (e.g. browser) has public keys of a few root-level
certification authorities
A site can get its name/URL and public key signed by a
certification authority: signed document is called a certificate
Client can use public key of certification authority to verify
certificate
Multiple levels of certification authorities can exist. Each
certification authority
presents its own public-key certificate signed by a
higher level authority, and
Uses its private key to sign the certificate of other web
sites/authorities
atabase System Concepts - 5th Edition, Aug 9, 2005. 8.51 ©Silberschatz, Korth and Sudarshan
End of Chapter