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I inherit a project of a program that configures devices via ethernet. Settings are stored in the database. The set of settings is constantly changing as devices are developing so there's a need for a simple schema change (user must be able to perform this operation).

Now, this simplicity is achieved by the XSD-scheme (easy readable and editable), and the data is stored as XML. This approach also satisfies the requirement of the use of various database engines (MS SQL and Oracle are currently supported).

I want to move database structure to the relational model. Are there any solutions which are as easy-to-change as described one while using a relational database?

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  • A normalized database will work. The ease of change comes from having the users write data, not change schemas.
    – Dan Bracuk
    Sep 16, 2013 at 10:00
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    If you have constantly changing/evolving settings then why not have a table of Key/Value pairs then there will be no need to change the database structure.
    – Nigel B
    Sep 16, 2013 at 10:01
  • It seems to me that your requirements would be better met by a key-value database. Have you looked into that option or has the choice of database already been made for you? Sep 16, 2013 at 10:03
  • @KlasLindbäck It is. The structure of configuration is very complex, a key-value ​​pairs are unfortunately not appropriate here.
    – Zharro
    Sep 16, 2013 at 10:06

2 Answers 2

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I want to move database structure to the relational model.

Why?

Do you want to be able to index/query parts of the configuration, or be able to change just one part of the configuration without touching the rest?

  • If no, then just treating the XML as opaque BLOB should be sufficient.
  • If yes, then you'll have to tell us more about the actual structure of configuration.1

1 BTW, some DBMSes can "see inside" the XML, index the elemnts and so on, but that would no longer be DBMS-agnostic.

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There are several solutions to your design problem. I suggest the following;

  1. Use a different database. Relational databases are not the best choice for this kind of data. There are databases with good support for dynamic data. One example of such a database is mongoDB, which uses JSON-style documents.

or 2. Create one (or a small set) of Key/Value table(s). You can support a hierarcical structure by adding a parent column that points to the parent key-value pair.

I wouldn't recommend changing a relational db schema on the fly as the result of a user operation. It goes against fundamental design rules for relational database design.

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