Oracle® Database Rules Manager and Expression Filter Developer's Guide 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E14919-04 |
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This appendix describes examples of applications using the Expression Filter.
In an active database system, the server performs some actions when certain criteria are met. For example, an application can monitor changes to data in a database table and react to these changes accordingly.
Consider the Car4Sale
application described in Section 11.2.1. In this application, the Consumer
table stores the information about consumers interested in buying used cars. In addition to the Consumer
table described in Section 11.2.2, assume that there is an Inventory
table that stores information about all the used cars available for sale, as defined in the following example:
CREATE TABLE Inventory (Model VARCHAR2(20), Year NUMBER, Price NUMBER, Mileage NUMBER);
Now, you can design the application such that the system reacts to any changes made to the data in the Inventory
table, by defining a row trigger on the table:
CREATE TRIGGER activechk AFTER insert OR update ON Inventory FOR EACH ROW DECLARE cursor c1 (ditem VARCHAR2) is SELECT CId, Phone FROM Consumer WHERE EVALUATE (Interest, ditem) = 1; ditem VARCHAR2(200); BEGIN ditem := Car4Sale.getVarchar(:new.Model, :new.Year, :new.Price, :new.Mileage); for cur in c1(ditem) loop DBMS_OUTPUT.PUT_LINE(' For Model '||:new.Model||' Call '||cur.CId|| ' @ '||cur.Phone); end loop; END; /
This trigger evaluates the expressions for every row inserted (or updated) into the Inventory
table and prints a message if a consumer is interested in the car. An Expression Filter index on the Interest
column can speed up the query on the Consumer
table.
Batch Evaluation of Expressions
To evaluate a set of expressions for a batch of data items, you can perform a simple join of the table storing data items and the table storing expressions. You can join the Consumer
table with the Inventory
table to determine the interest in each car, as shown in the following example:
SELECT DISTINCT Inventory.Model, count(*) as Demand FROM Consumer, Inventory WHERE EVALUATE (Consumer.Interest, Car4Sale.getVarchar(Inventory.Model, Inventory.Year, Inventory.Price, Inventory.Mileage)) = 1 GROUP BY Inventory.Model ORDER BY Demand DESC;
You can also use the join semantics of the EVALUATE
operator to maintain complex N-to-M (many-to-many) relationships between data stored in multiple tables.
Consider an application that manages IT support resources based on the responsibilities (or duties) and the workload of each representative. In this application, you can capture the responsibilities of the representatives as expressions defined using variables such as the priority of the problem, organization, and the environment.
Create a table named ITResource
to store information about all the available representatives, as shown in the following example:
-- Create the object type and the attribute set for ticket description -- CREATE OR REPLACE TYPE ITTicket AS OBJECT ( Priority NUMBER, Environment VARCHAR2(10), Organization VARCHAR2(10)); / BEGIN DBMS_EXPFIL.CREATE_ATTRIBUTE_SET(attr_set => 'ITTicket', from_type => 'Yes'); END; / -- Table storing expressions -- CREATE TABLE ITResource (RId NUMBER, Duties VARCHAR2(100)); BEGIN DBMS_EXPFIL.ASSIGN_ATTRIBUTE_SET(attr_set => 'ITTicket', expr_tab => 'ITResource', expr_col => 'Duties'); END; / INSERT INTO ITResource (RId, Duties) VALUES (1, 'Priority <= 2 and Environment = ''NT'' and Organization = ''Research'''); INSERT INTO ITResource (RId, Duties) VALUES (2, 'Priority = 1 and (Environment = ''UNIX'' or Environment = ''LINUX'') and Organization = ''APPS''');
Create a table named ITProblem
to store the problems filed, as shown in the following example:
CREATE TABLE ITProblem (PId NUMBER, Description ITTicket, AssignedTo NUMBER);
The AssignedTo
column in the ITProblem
table stores the identifier of the representative handling the problem.
Now, use the following UPDATE
statement to assign all the previously unassigned problems to capable IT representatives:
UPDATE ITProblem p SET AssignedTo = (SELECT RId FROM ITResource r WHERE EVALUATE(r.Duties, p.Description.getVarchar()) = 1 and rownum < 2) WHERE AssignedTo IS NULL;
The previous UPDATE
operation can benefit from an Expression Filter index defined on the Duties
column of the Resource
table.