I am looking for an SQL database of some type that is entirely based around the concept of time, just like those that are geo-centric, relationship-centric, etc.

My main wish is that I can make changes to the database as I go along, and then at any point run a query that essentially says, show me how the database looked at this date and time. I would prefer the SQL database have this functionality built in, instead of having to re-implement it using a log table and recording each and every transaction.

Am I hoping for a pipe dream?

Thanks!

EDIT: After some further research, it seems that a "temporal database" might be what I'm looking for. So any information on using one of those, if there are any good open-source ones available, etc., would be very helpful!

link|improve this question

I believe for my purposes it would be fine to assume that the structure of the database would remain unchanged. The data, however, would change. – Riley Dutton Jul 22 '10 at 21:45
1  
Your question, then, confuses the issue. You need to define your database schema to handle the fact that your data is only valid for certain periods of time by inserting records specifying those time periods. The way the question is written has made some of the folks below wonder if you wish to do queries on metadata (what did the database look like before I ran this DELETE statement?). This solution is something you need to get around by good schema design, not having a special journal or using some historical recovery tool. – J. Polfer Jul 22 '10 at 21:51
Okay, thanks for the info. Any links you can provide that might point me in the right direction or provide some information about the good schema design to use in this instance would be helpful. – Riley Dutton Jul 22 '10 at 22:03
Can do. What kind of knowledge do you have of relational databases? If I know where your'e at knowledged/experience-wise, it'll make it easier to recommend something. – J. Polfer Jul 22 '10 at 22:09
Sounds like you'll need to read some introductory stuff on relational database design. I'd look up stuff on (in this order) database design, ERD (to give you a conceptual way of looking at the problem), good descriptions on different types of table keys. Then I'd try to map out the schema you'd need on paper, and then perhaps using Dia or Visio's ERD/Database design objects. – J. Polfer Jul 23 '10 at 20:32
feedback

3 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

Oracle has Flashback. Closest I can think of on SQL Server requires snapshots, without resorting to restoring from transaction logs (requires full recovery model).

link|improve this answer
I'm looking for something that treats this more like a "feature", not a recovery tool. After reading about temporal DB's, that seems to be the ticket. You can basically query the database and say "as of right now, what do you think about X", but you can also say "as of Y time, what did you think about X?", even if the values would (in a typical DB) have been overwritten by then. – Riley Dutton Jul 22 '10 at 21:39
@Riley Dutton: Oracle's Flashback is the closest I know of then. What you ask for is typically transaction log domain... – OMG Ponies Jul 22 '10 at 21:48
3  
That's exactly how Oracle's flashback works. SELECT * FROM my_table AS OF TIMESTAMP '2010-01-01' (or a similar syntax) You can even set the whole transaction to a point in the past, and then all queries will return values from back then. To go a really long way back, you'll need Oracle 11g and it's "Flashback Archive" which is quite costly though. – a_horse_with_no_name Jul 22 '10 at 21:49
Okay, thanks for the information. I think Oracle is probably a non-starter, since it costs money, but maybe reading about it will give me some good ideas. – Riley Dutton Jul 22 '10 at 22:04
1  
@RileyDutton, @ManiacZX, @a_horse_with_no_name : Oracle's Total Recall (aka Flashback Archive) option - which is the temporal database implementation - is a chargeable extra on the Enterprise Edition, so it is expensive. However, the markup isn't as gouging as some of Oracle's other chargeable extras and the feature does work really neatly. – APC Jul 24 '10 at 14:38
show 1 more comment
feedback

You may want to check out TimeDB.

Note, though, that you can do the exact same thing yourself by implementing a ValidTimeBegin and ValidTimeEnd columns in your tables and populating them accordingly. The tool simply takes its special SQL statements and converts them to SQL92-compliant statements.

link|improve this answer
feedback

What your looking for software historian. These are databases where all data is organised temporally, really their core function. Once of the uses of the software historian, is to enable a playback function, where time series data can be played back in the order it was entered, which is often critical in those industries that require it, like real time applications in finance, gas, oil and electric utilities.

Some of the companies that offer software historians, are

Wonderware FactoryTalk OSI PI

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.