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My application has notification settings for users that can belong to groups. A group administrator can define settings for the entire group, so that when any user performs an action, the administrator is notified. The administrator can also define settings for an individual user, which will override the group setting.

Right now I have a database with columns: group_id, action1, action2, action3, .... The actions are booleans that determine if the administrator is notified when that action is performed by a user in his or her group.

I could make a separate table owned by the User model instead of the Group model, but it feels inefficient to store the exact same data in an entirely separate table save changing the group_id to user_id.

Another option is to add user_id to the table I already have, and allow null values for group_id. When determining notification settings for a User, the application would first choose the setting based on User, and fallback to the setting where group_id is not null. This feels inefficient because there will be many null values in the database, but it definitely requires less work on my part.

Is there a design for this situation that is more efficient than the two I've described?

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    When you talk about settings "which will override the group setting", what does that mean? Does it mean an individual user's settings can take the place of existing group settings, or that an individual user's settings can be in addition to existing group settings? Nov 9, 2012 at 23:01
  • In addition. There can be many users per group. When there are settings defined for an individual user, then I want to use those settings to determine when I am notified about that user. If there are not settings defined for an individual user, then I want the group notification settings to determine when I am notified about that user. Nov 9, 2012 at 23:07
  • Does this answer your question? How can you represent inheritance in a database?
    – philipxy
    Apr 4, 2022 at 15:07

2 Answers 2

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Generally, there are two strategies to handle a situation like this:

  1. Use Exclusive FKs

Essentially, each of the possible parent tables will have its own, separate foreign key in the child table, and there is a CHECK enforcing exactly one of them is non-NULL. Since FKs are only enforced on non-NULL fields (meaning, when a FK is set to NULL there is no database-level validation), only one of the FKs will be enforced.

For example:

enter image description here

(relationship between user and group omitted)

CHECK (
    (group_id IS NOT NULL AND user_id IS NULL)
    OR (group_id IS NULL AND user_id IS NOT NULL)
)
  1. Use Inheritance

Inherit user and group from a common supertype and then connect the setting to the supertype:

enter image description here

For more information on inheritance (aka. category, subclassing, subtype, generalization hierarchy etc.), take a look at "Subtype Relationships" chapter of ERwin Methods Guide. Unfortunately, modern DBMSes don't natively support inheritance - for some ideas about physically implementing it, take a look at this post.

This is a heavy-duty solution probably not justified for just two tables (groups and users), but can be quite "scalable" for many tables.

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    "Unfortunately, modern DBMSes don't natively support inheritance" - actually there is a modern DBMS that does support inheritance: Postgres
    – user330315
    Mar 13, 2014 at 11:31
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    @a_horse_with_no_name I'm aware of that, but the support is partial - inheritance has not been integrated with unique, primary key, and foreign key constraints, which limits its usefulness in this case. Mar 13, 2014 at 11:37
1

how about an Actions table instead?

It could have the columns:

Table Actions:
ActionId - Identity columns
Action   - Store your action here; type would depend on your system
RefId    - The Id for either the user or the group
RefTable - either User or Group

then when accessing the table you know your ID already, and you know if it's a group or user and can then get the appropriate action.

This make sense?

Update:

If its possible that you could have the same action for both user/group and want one to take priority (as you mentioned in your Q) you could also add a priority column and set it as a tinyInt - lower number = higher priority. Then when you select the actions you can order them by this priority. Then perform the first action, or each action in order.

5
  • So this is essentially changing group_id to ref_id and then storing a new field that indicates what table it is referencing? Makes sense... but I don't think that storing the table as a string like that is good practice? Nov 9, 2012 at 18:07
  • I've done, and still do this myself. Sometimes it just makes more sense. There will always be people that say something is better/worse practice than something else, though quite often they are generic rules-of-thumb and don't suit every environment. Nothing stopping you adding the tablenames as an Enum in your system either, so you can make sure there are no typo's when writing your queries. Nov 9, 2012 at 18:10
  • Also, as in my example, do away with Action1, Action2 etc. It will likely get more complicated to manage, rather than an action per row. Nov 9, 2012 at 18:12
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    @LoganSerman RefTable is not a very good idea - it'll prevent the database from using FKs to defend itself from bad data. You might enforce such "hybrid" referential integrity through triggers, but declarative constraints should be preferred to triggers where possible. Nov 9, 2012 at 23:30
  • @BrankoDimitrijevic, If you're in control of building the app then you can prevent bad data, such as setting up an Enum to reflect the names - this way nobody ever actually types the table name in their code. Nov 10, 2012 at 13:42

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