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Some co-workers and I got into a debate on the best way to store historical data. Currently, for some systems, I use a separate table to store historical data, and I keep an original table for the current, active record. So, let's say I have table FOO. Under my system, all active records will go in FOO, and all historical records will go in FOO_Hist. Many different fields in FOO can be updated by the user, so I want to keep an accurate account of everything updated. FOO_Hist holds the exact same fields as FOO with the exception of an auto-incrementing HIST_ID. Every time FOO is updated, I perform an insert statement into FOO_Hist similar to: insert into FOO_HIST select * from FOO where id = @id.

My co-worker says that this is bad design because I shouldn't have an exact copy of a table for historical reasons and should just insert another record into the active table with a flag indicating that it's for historical purposes.

Is there a standard for dealing with historical data storage? It seems to me that I don't want to clutter my active records with all of my historical records in the same table considering that it may be well over a million records (I'm thinking long term).

How do you or your company handle this?

I'm using MS SQL Server 2008, but I'd like to keep the answer generic and arbitrary of any DBMS.

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11 Answers 11

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Supporting historical data directly within an operational system will make your application much more complex than it would otherwise be. Generally, I would not recommend doing it unless you have a hard requirement to manipulate historical versions of a record within the system.

If you look closely, most requirements for historical data fall into one of two categories:

  • Audit logging: This is better off done with audit tables. It's fairly easy to write a tool that generates scripts to create audit log tables and triggers by reading metadata from the system data dictionary. This type of tool can be used to retrofit audit logging onto most systems. You can also use this subsystem for changed data capture if you want to implement a data warehouse (see below).

  • Historical reporting: Reporting on historical state, 'as-at' positions or analytical reporting over time. It may be possible to fulfill simple historical reporting requirements by querying audit logging tables of the sort described above. If you have more complex requirements then it may be more economical to implement a data mart for the reporting than to try and integrate history directly into the operational system.

    Slowly-changing dimensions are by far the simplest mechanism for tracking and querying historical state and much of the history tracking can be automated. Generic handlers aren't that hard to write. Generally, historical reporting does not have to use up-to-the-minute data, so a batched refresh mechanism is normally fine. This keeps your core and reporting system architecture relatively simple.

If your requirements fall into one of these two categories, you are probably better off not storing historical data in your operational system. Separating the historical functionality into another subsystem will probably be less effort overall and produce transactional and audit/reporting databases that work much better for their intended purpose.

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  • I think I see what you're saying. So what I did with my FOO_Hist table was really create an audit table. Instead of using a trigger to insert into the audit table on update, I just ran a statement in the program. Is that correct?
    – Aaron
    Oct 6, 2010 at 15:57
  • 7
    Pretty much. It's better to do this sort of audit logging with triggers, though; the triggers make sure that any changes (including manual data fixes) get recorded in the audit logs. If you've got more than 10-20 tables to audit it's probably quicker over all to build a trigger generator tool. If the disk traffic for the audit logs is a problem you can put the audit log tables on a separate set of disks. Oct 6, 2010 at 15:59
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I don't think there is a particular standard way of doing it but I thought I would throw in a possible method. I work in Oracle and our in-house web application framework that utilizes XML for storing application data.

We use something called a Master - Detail model that at it's simplest consists of:

Master Table for example calledWidgets often just containing an ID. Will often contain data that won't change over time / isn't historical.

Detail / History Table for example called Widget_Details containing at least:

  • ID - primary key. Detail/historical ID
  • MASTER_ID - for example in this case called 'WIDGET_ID', this is the FK to the Master record
  • START_DATETIME - timestamp indicating the start of that database row
  • END_DATETIME - timestamp indicating the end of that database row
  • STATUS_CONTROL - single char column indicated status of the row. 'C' indicates current, NULL or 'A' would be historical/archived. We only use this because we can't index on END_DATETIME being NULL
  • CREATED_BY_WUA_ID - stores the ID of the account that caused the row to be created
  • XMLDATA - stores the actual data

So essentially, a entity starts by having 1 row in the master and 1 row in the detail. The detail having a NULL end date and STATUS_CONTROL of 'C'. When an update occurs, the current row is updated to have END_DATETIME of the current time and status_control is set to NULL (or 'A' if preferred). A new row is created in the detail table, still linked to the same master, with status_control 'C', the id of the person making the update and the new data stored in the XMLDATA column.

This is the basis of our historical model. The Create / Update logic is handled in an Oracle PL/SQL package so you simply pass the function the current ID, your user ID and the new XML data and internally it does all the updating / inserting of rows to represent that in the historical model. The start and end times indicate when that row in the table is active for.

Storage is cheap, we don't generally DELETE data and prefer to keep an audit trail. This allows us to see what our data looked like at any given time. By indexing status_control = 'C' or using a View, cluttering isn't exactly a problem. Obviously your queries need to take into account you should always use the current (NULL end_datetime and status_control = 'C') version of a record.

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  • Hi Chris, if you do that, the ID (primary key) must be change right? how about the relational with another table if it's used by another ones?
    – projo
    Sep 10, 2013 at 0:26
  • @projo the ID on your master table is the PK and conceptually the "PK" for whatever concept you are dealing with. The ID on the detail table is the PK to identify a historical version for the master (which is another column on the detail). When forming relationships you'd often reference the true PK of your concept (i.e. the ID on your master table or the MASTER_ID column on your detail) and use STATUS_CONTROL = 'C' to make sure you are getting current version. Alternatively you might reference the detail ID to relate something to a particular point in time. Nov 6, 2013 at 14:05
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    We are using the same aproach.But now I am wondering is it better to store only START_DATETIME and don't store END_DATETIME
    – bat_ventzi
    May 27, 2015 at 7:40
  • Couple of variations in my experience. If your entity is "ended", i.e. archived or deleted then you could in effect have no detail records with 'C' status control, i.e. no current row, though you wouldn't know when that happened. Alternatively, you could set an end_datetime on the final row and the presence of an 'ended' 'C' row could indicate the entity is now deleted/archived. Finally, you could represent this through another column, STATUS which you may likely already have. May 27, 2015 at 7:42
  • @ChrisCameron-Mills The approach what you are suggesting would work better when we have a master table and a single details table. What if the details table is depending on a few other tables that also change over time? One possible way to think of is to add similar columns to track versioning to all these tables. But won't that be too complex?
    – Chris
    Nov 18, 2019 at 11:59
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I think your approach is correct. The historical table should be a copy of the main table without indexes, make sure you have updated timestamps in the table as well.

If you try the other approach soon enough you will face problems:

  • maintenance overhead
  • more flags in selects
  • queries slowdown
  • growth of tables, indexes
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In SQL Server 2016 and above, there is a new feature called Temporal Tables that aims to solve this challenge with minimal effort from developer. The concept of temporal table is similar to Change Data Capture (CDC), with the difference that temporal table has abstracted most of the things that you had to do manually if you were using CDC.

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Just wanted to add an option that I started using because I use Azure SQL and the multiple table thing was way too cumbersome for me. I added an insert/update/delete trigger on my table and then converted the before/after change to json using the "FOR JSON AUTO" feature.

 SET @beforeJson = (SELECT * FROM DELETED FOR JSON AUTO)
SET @afterJson = (SELECT * FROM INSERTED FOR JSON AUTO)

That returns a JSON representation fo the record before/after the change. I then store those values in a history table with a timestamp of when the change occurred (I also store the ID for current record of concern). Using the serialization process, I can control how data is backfilled in the case of changes to schema.

I learned about this from this link here

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I Know this old post but Just wanted to add few points. The standard for such problems is what works best for the situation. understanding the need for such storage, and potential use of the historical/audit/change tracking data is very importat.

Audit (security purpose) : Use a common table for all your auditable tables. define structure to store column name , before value and after value fields.

Archive/Historical: for cases like tracking previous address , phone number etc. creating a separate table FOO_HIST is better if you your active transaction table schema does not change significantly in the future(if your history table has to have the same structure). if you anticipate table normalization , datatype change addition/removal of columns, store your historical data in xml format . define a table with the following columns (ID,Date, Schema Version, XMLData). this will easily handle schema changes . but you have to deal with xml and that could introduce a level of complication for data retrieval .

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You can use MSSQL Server Auditing feature. From version SQL Server 2012 you will find this feature in all editions:

http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc280386.aspx

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You could just partition the tables no?

"Partitioned Table and Index Strategies Using SQL Server 2008 When a database table grows in size to the hundreds of gigabytes or more, it can become more difficult to load new data, remove old data, and maintain indexes. Just the sheer size of the table causes such operations to take much longer. Even the data that must be loaded or removed can be very sizable, making INSERT and DELETE operations on the table impractical. The Microsoft SQL Server 2008 database software provides table partitioning to make such operations more manageable."

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  • Yes, I can partition the tables, but is that the standard when dealing with historical data? Should historical data be included in the same table as active data? These are the questions that I wanted to discuss. This also is not arbitrary as it pertains to SQL Server 2008.
    – Aaron
    Oct 6, 2010 at 15:42
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The real question is do you need to use historical data and active data together for reporting? If so keep them in one table, partition and create a view for active records to use in active queries. If you only need to look at them occasionally (to research leagal issues or some such) then put them in a separate table.

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  • 2
    Is it more difficult to JOIN two tables in a couple historical reports or is it more difficult to modify every single table insert/update/delete to be aware of historical concerns? Actually, an audit log would include even current data in the history table, so current table shouldn't even be needed in a report.
    – user645280
    Jun 13, 2013 at 14:29
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Another option is to archive the operational data on a [daily|hourly|whatever] basis. Most database engines support the extraction of the data into an archive.

Basically, the idea is to create a scheduled Windows or CRON job that

  1. determines the current tables in the operational database
  2. selects all data from every table into a CSV or XML file
  3. compresses the exported data to a ZIP file, preferably with the timestamp of the generation in the file name for easier archiving.

Many SQL database engines come with a tool that can be used for this purpose. For example, when using MySQL on Linux, the following command can be used in a CRON job to schedule the extraction:

mysqldump --all-databases --xml --lock-tables=false -ppassword | gzip -c | cat > /media/bak/servername-$(date +%Y-%m-%d)-mysql.xml.gz
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  • 2
    This is not at all appropriate for historical data because if somebody changes a value and changes it back within the archive cycle, that updates are lost. There is also no easy way to look at the changes to one entity over time or to restore an entity partially. Jan 19, 2017 at 8:56
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You can create a materialized/indexed views on the table. Based on your requirement you can do full or partial update of the views. Please see this to create mview and log. How to create materialized views in SQL Server?

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