|
|
·
What is normalization? Explain different
levels of normalization?
o
Check out the article Q100139 from
Microsoft knowledge base and of course, there’s much more information available
in the net. It’ll be a good idea to get a hold of any RDBMS fundamentals text
book, especially the one by C. J. Date. Most of the times, it will be okay if
you can explain till third normal form.
·
What is denormalization and when would you
go for it?
o
As the name indicates, denormalization is
the reverse process of normalization. It’s the controlled introduction of
redundancy in to the database design. It helps improve the query performance as
the number of joins could be reduced.
·
How do you implement one-to-one,
one-to-many and many-to-many relationships while designing tables?
o
One-to-One relationship can be implemented
as a single table and rarely as two tables with primary and foreign key
relationships. One-to-Many relationships are implemented by splitting the data
into two tables with primary key and foreign key relationships. Many-to-Many
relationships are implemented using a junction table with the keys from both the
tables forming the composite primary key of the junction table. It will be a
good idea to read up a database designing fundamentals text book.
·
What’s the difference between a primary
key and a unique key?
o
Both primary key and unique enforce
uniqueness of the column on which they are defined. But by default primary key
creates a clustered index on the column, where are unique creates a nonclustered
index by default. Another major difference is that, primary key doesn’t allow
NULLs, but unique key allows one NULL only.
·
What are user defined datatypes and when
you should go for them?
o
User defined datatypes let you extend the
base SQL Server datatypes by providing a descriptive name, and format to the
database. Take for example, in your database, there is a column called
Flight_Num which appears in many tables. In all these tables it should be
varchar(8). In this case you could create a user defined datatype called
Flight_num_type of varchar(8) and use it across all your tables. See sp_addtype,
sp_droptype in books online.
·
What is bit datatype and what’s the
information that can be stored inside a bit column?
o
Bit datatype is used to store boolean
information like 1 or 0 (true or false). Untill SQL Server 6.5 bit datatype
could hold either a 1 or 0 and there was no support for NULL. But from SQL
Server 7.0 onwards, bit datatype can represent a third state, which is NULL.
·
Define candidate key, alternate key,
composite key.
o
A candidate key is one that can identify
each row of a table uniquely. Generally a candidate key becomes the primary key
of the table. If the table has more than one candidate key, one of them will
become the primary key, and the rest are called alternate keys. A key formed by
combining at least two or more columns is called composite key.
·
What are defaults? Is there a column to
which a default can’t be bound?
o
A default is a value that will be used by
a column, if no value is supplied to that column while inserting data. IDENTITY
columns and timestamp columns can’t have defaults bound to them. See CREATE
DEFAULT in books online.
·
What is a transaction and what are ACID
properties?
o
A transaction is a logical unit of work in
which, all the steps must be performed or none. ACID stands for Atomicity,
Consistency, Isolation, Durability. These are the properties of a transaction.
For more information and explanation of these properties, see SQL Server books
online or any RDBMS fundamentals text book. Explain different isolation levels
An isolation level determines the degree of isolation of data between concurrent
transactions. The default SQL Server isolation level is Read Committed. Here are
the other isolation levels (in the ascending order of isolation): Read
Uncommitted, Read Committed, Repeatable Read, Serializable. See SQL Server books
online for an explanation of the isolation levels. Be sure to read about SET
TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL, which lets you customize the isolation level at the
connection level. Read Committed - A transaction operating at the Read Committed
level cannot see changes made by other transactions until those transactions are
committed. At this level of isolation, dirty reads are not possible but
nonrepeatable reads and phantoms are possible. Read Uncommitted - A transaction
operating at the Read Uncommitted level can see uncommitted changes made by
other transactions. At this level of isolation, dirty reads, nonrepeatable
reads, and phantoms are all possible. Repeatable Read - A transaction operating
at the Repeatable Read level is guaranteed not to see any changes made by other
transactions in values it has already read. At this level of isolation, dirty
reads and nonrepeatable reads are not possible but phantoms are possible.
Serializable - A transaction operating at the Serializable level guarantees that
all concurrent transactions interact only in ways that produce the same effect
as if each transaction were entirely executed one after the other. At this
isolation level, dirty reads, nonrepeatable reads, and phantoms are not
possible.
·
CREATE INDEX myIndex ON
myTable(myColumn)What type of Index will get created after executing the above
statement?
o
Non-clustered index. Important thing to
note: By default a clustered index gets created on the primary key, unless
specified otherwise.
·
What’s the maximum size of a row?
o
8060 bytes. Don’t be surprised with
questions like ‘what is the maximum number of columns per table’. 1024 columns
per table. Check out SQL Server books online for the page titled: "Maximum
Capacity Specifications". Explain Active/Active and Active/Passive cluster
configurations Hopefully you have experience setting up cluster servers. But if
you don’t, at least be familiar with the way clustering works and the two
clusterning configurations Active/Active and Active/Passive. SQL Server books
online has enough information on this topic and there is a good white paper
available on Microsoft site. Explain the architecture of SQL Server This is a
very important question and you better be able to answer it if consider yourself
a DBA. SQL Server books online is the best place to read about SQL Server
architecture. Read up the chapter dedicated to SQL Server Architecture.
·
What is lock escalation?
o
Lock escalation is the process of
converting a lot of low level locks (like row locks, page locks) into higher
level locks (like table locks). Every lock is a memory structure too many locks
would mean, more memory being occupied by locks. To prevent this from happening,
SQL Server escalates the many fine-grain locks to fewer coarse-grain locks. Lock
escalation threshold was definable in SQL Server 6.5, but from SQL Server 7.0
onwards it’s dynamically managed by SQL Server.
·
What’s the difference between DELETE TABLE
and TRUNCATE TABLE commands?
o
DELETE TABLE is a logged operation, so the
deletion of each row gets logged in the transaction log, which makes it slow.
TRUNCATE TABLE also deletes all the rows in a table, but it won’t log the
deletion of each row, instead it logs the deallocation of the data pages of the
table, which makes it faster. Of course, TRUNCATE TABLE can be rolled back.
TRUNCATE TABLE is functionally identical to DELETE statement with no WHERE
clause: both remove all rows in the table. But TRUNCATE TABLE is faster and uses
fewer system and transaction log resources than DELETE. The DELETE statement
removes rows one at a time and records an entry in the transaction log for each
deleted row. TRUNCATE TABLE removes the data by deallocating the data pages used
to store the table’s data, and only the page deallocations are recorded in the
transaction log. TRUNCATE TABLE removes all rows from a table, but the table
structure and its columns, constraints, indexes and so on remain. The counter
used by an identity for new rows is reset to the seed for the column. If you
want to retain the identity counter, use DELETE instead. If you want to remove
table definition and its data, use the DROP TABLE statement. You cannot use
TRUNCATE TABLE on a table referenced by a FOREIGN KEY constraint; instead, use
DELETE statement without a WHERE clause. Because TRUNCATE TABLE is not logged,
it cannot activate a trigger. TRUNCATE TABLE may not be used on tables
participating in an indexed view
·
Explain the storage models of OLAP
o
Check out MOLAP, ROLAP and HOLAP in SQL
Server books online for more infomation.
·
What are the new features introduced in
SQL Server 2000 (or the latest release of SQL Server at the time of your
interview)? What changed between the previous version of SQL Server and the
current version?
o
This question is generally asked to see
how current is your knowledge. Generally there is a section in the beginning of
the books online titled "What’s New", which has all such information. Of course,
reading just that is not enough, you should have tried those things to better
answer the questions. Also check out the section titled "Backward Compatibility"
in books online which talks about the changes that have taken place in the new
version.
·
What are constraints? Explain different
types of constraints.
o
Constraints enable the RDBMS enforce the
integrity of the database automatically, without needing you to create triggers,
rule or defaults. Types of constraints: NOT NULL, CHECK, UNIQUE, PRIMARY KEY,
FOREIGN KEY. For an explanation of these constraints see books online for the
pages titled: "Constraints" and "CREATE TABLE", "ALTER TABLE"
·
What is an index? What are the types of
indexes? How many clustered indexes can be created on a table? I create a
separate index on each column of a table. What are the advantages and
disadvantages of this approach?
o
Indexes in SQL Server are similar to the
indexes in books. They help SQL Server retrieve the data quicker. Indexes are of
two types. Clustered indexes and non-clustered indexes. When you create a
clustered index on a table, all the rows in the table are stored in the order of
the clustered index key. So, there can be only one clustered index per table.
Non-clustered indexes have their own storage separate from the table data
storage. Non-clustered indexes are stored as B-tree structures (so do clustered
indexes), with the leaf level nodes having the index key and it’s row locater.
The row located could be the RID or the Clustered index key, depending up on the
absence or presence of clustered index on the table. If you create an index on
each column of a table, it improves the query performance, as the query
optimizer can choose from all the existing indexes to come up with an efficient
execution plan. At the same t ime, data modification operations (such as INSERT,
UPDATE, DELETE) will become slow, as every time data changes in the table, all
the indexes need to be updated. Another disadvantage is that, indexes need disk
space, the more indexes you have, more disk space is used.
·
What is RAID and what are different types
of RAID configurations?
o
RAID stands for Redundant Array of
Inexpensive Disks, used to provide fault tolerance to database servers. There
are six RAID levels 0 through 5 offering different levels of performance, fault
tolerance. MSDN has some information about RAID levels and for detailed
information, check out the RAID advisory board’s homepage
·
What are the steps you will take to
improve performance of a poor performing query?
o
This is a very open ended question and
there could be a lot of reasons behind the poor performance of a query. But some
general issues that you could talk about would be: No indexes, table scans,
missing or out of date statistics, blocking, excess recompilations of stored
procedures, procedures and triggers without SET NOCOUNT ON, poorly written query
with unnecessarily complicated joins, too much normalization, excess usage of
cursors and temporary tables. Some of the tools/ways that help you
troubleshooting performance problems are: SET SHOWPLAN_ALL ON, SET SHOWPLAN_TEXT
ON, SET STATISTICS IO ON, SQL Server Profiler, Windows NT /2000 Performance
monitor, Graphical execution plan in Query Analyzer. Download the white paper on
performance tuning SQL Server from Microsoft web site. Don’t forget to check out
sql-server-performance.com
·
What are the steps you will take, if you
are tasked with securing an SQL Server?
o
Again this is another open ended question.
Here are some things you could talk about: Preferring NT authentication, using
server, databse and application roles to control access to the data, securing
the physical database files using NTFS permissions, using an unguessable SA
password, restricting physical access to the SQL Server, renaming the
Administrator account on the SQL Server computer, disabling the Guest account,
enabling auditing, using multiprotocol encryption, setting up SSL, setting up
firewalls, isolating SQL Server from the web server etc. Read the white paper on
SQL Server security from Microsoft website. Also check out My SQL Server
security best practices
·
What is a deadlock and what is a live
lock? How will you go about resolving deadlocks?
o
Deadlock is a situation when two
processes, each having a lock on one piece of data, attempt to acquire a lock on
the other’s piece. Each process would wait indefinitely for the other to release
the lock, unless one of the user processes is terminated. SQL Server detects
deadlocks and terminates one user’s process. A livelock is one, where a request
for an exclusive lock is repeatedly denied because a series of overlapping
shared locks keeps interfering. SQL Server detects the situation after four
denials and refuses further shared locks. A livelock also occurs when read
transactions monopolize a table or page, forcing a write transaction to wait
indefinitely. Check out SET DEADLOCK_PRIORITY and "Minimizing Deadlocks" in SQL
Server books online. Also check out the article Q169960 from Microsoft knowledge
base.
·
What is blocking and how would you
troubleshoot it?
o
Blocking happens when one connection from
an application holds a lock and a second connection requires a conflicting lock
type. This forces the second connection to wait, blocked on the first. Read up
the following topics in SQL Server books online: Understanding and avoiding
blocking, Coding efficient transactions. Explain CREATE DATABASE syntax Many of
us are used to creating databases from the Enterprise Manager or by just issuing
the command: CREATE DATABAE MyDB.
·
But what if you have to create a database
with two filegroups, one on drive C and the other on drive D with log on drive E
with an initial size of 600 MB and with a growth factor of 15%?
o
That’s why being a DBA you should be
familiar with the CREATE DATABASE syntax. Check out SQL Server books online for
more information.
·
How to restart SQL Server in single user
mode? How to start SQL Server in minimal configuration mode?
o
SQL Server can be started from command
line, using the SQLSERVR.EXE. This EXE has some very important parameters with
which a DBA should be familiar with. -m is used for starting SQL Server in
single user mode and -f is used to start the SQL Server in minimal configuration
mode. Check out SQL Server books online for more parameters and their
explanations.
·
As a part of your job, what are the DBCC
commands that you commonly use for database maintenance?
o
DBCC CHECKDB, DBCC CHECKTABLE, DBCC
CHECKCATALOG, DBCC CHECKALLOC, DBCC SHOWCONTIG, DBCC SHRINKDATABASE, DBCC
SHRINKFILE etc. But there are a whole load of DBCC commands which are very
useful for DBAs. Check out SQL Server books online for more information.
·
What are statistics, under what
circumstances they go out of date, how do you update them?
o
Statistics determine the selectivity of
the indexes. If an indexed column has unique values then the selectivity of that
index is more, as opposed to an index with non-unique values. Query optimizer
uses these indexes in determining whether to choose an index or not while
executing a query. Some situations under which you should update statistics: 1)
If there is significant change in the key values in the index 2) If a large
amount of data in an indexed column has been added, changed, or removed (that
is, if the distribution of key values has changed), or the table has been
truncated using the TRUNCATE TABLE statement and then repopulated 3) Database is
upgraded from a previous version. Look up SQL Server books online for the
following commands: UPDATE STATISTICS, STATS_DATE, DBCC SHOW_STATISTICS, CREATE
STATISTICS, DROP STATISTICS, sp_autostats, sp_createstats, sp_updatestats
·
What are the different ways of moving
data/databases between servers and databases in SQL Server?
o
There are lots of options available, you
have to choose your option depending upon your requirements. Some of the options
you have are: BACKUP/RESTORE, dettaching and attaching databases, replication,
DTS, BCP, logshipping, INSERT…SELECT, SELECT…INTO, creating INSERT scripts to
generate data.
·
Explain different types of BACKUPs
avaialabe in SQL Server? Given a particular scenario, how would you go about
choosing a backup plan?
o
Types of backups you can create in SQL
Sever 7.0+ are Full database backup, differential database backup, transaction
log backup, filegroup backup. Check out the BACKUP and RESTORE commands in SQL
Server books online. Be prepared to write the commands in your interview. Books
online also has information on detailed backup/restore architecture and when one
should go for a particular kind of backup.
·
What is database replication? What are the
different types of replication you can set up in SQL Server?
o
Replication is the process of
copying/moving data between databases on the same or different servers. SQL
Server supports the following types of replication scenarios: · Snapshot
replication · Transactional replication (with immediate updating subscribers,
with queued updating subscribers) · Merge replication See SQL Server books
online for indepth coverage on replication. Be prepared to explain how different
replication agents function, what are the main system tables used in replication
etc.
·
How to determine the service pack
currently installed on SQL Server?
o
The global variable @@Version stores the
build number of the sqlservr.exe, which is used to determine the service pack
installed. To know more about this process visit SQL Server service packs and
versions.
·
What are cursors? Explain different types
of cursors. What are the disadvantages of cursors? How can you avoid cursors?
o
Cursors allow row-by-row processing of the
resultsets. Types of cursors: Static, Dynamic, Forward-only, Keyset-driven. See
books online for more information. Disadvantages of cursors: Each time you fetch
a row from the cursor, it results in a network roundtrip, where as a normal
SELECT query makes only one roundtrip, however large the resultset is. Cursors
are also costly because they require more resources and temporary storage
(results in more IO operations). Further, there are restrictions on the SELECT
statements that can be used with some types of cursors. Most of the times, set
based operations can be used instead of cursors. Here is an example: If you have
to give a flat hike to your employees using the following criteria: Salary
between 30000 and 40000 – 5000 hike Salary between 40000 and 55000 – 7000 hike
Salary between 55000 and 65000 – 9000 hike. In this situation many developers
tend to use a cursor, determine each employee’s salary and update his salary
according to the above formula. But the same can be achieved by multiple update
statements or can be combined in a single UPDATE statement as shown below:
o
UPDATE
tbl_emp SET salary = CASE WHEN salary BETWEEN 30000 AND 40000 THEN salary + 5000
WHEN salary BETWEEN 40000 AND 55000 THEN salary + 7000 WHEN salary BETWEEN 55000
AND 65000 THEN salary + 10000 END
o
Another situation in which developers tend
to use cursors: You need to call a stored procedure when a column in a
particular row meets certain condition. You don’t have to use cursors for this.
This can be achieved using WHILE loop, as long as there is a unique key to
identify each row. For examples of using WHILE loop for row by row processing,
check out the ‘My code library’ section of my site or search for WHILE. Write
down the general syntax for a SELECT statements covering all the options. Here’s
the basic syntax: (Also checkout SELECT in books online for advanced syntax).
o
SELECT
select_list [INTO new_table_] FROM table_source [WHERE search_condition] [GROUP
BY group_by_expression] [HAVING search_condition] [ORDER BY order_expression
[ASC | DESC] ]
·
What is a join and explain different types
of joins.
o
Joins are used in queries to explain how
different tables are related. Joins also let you select data from a table
depending upon data from another table. Types of joins: INNER JOINs, OUTER
JOINs, CROSS JOINs. OUTER JOINs are further classified as LEFT OUTER JOINS,
RIGHT OUTER JOINS and FULL OUTER JOINS. For more information see pages from
books online titled: "Join Fundamentals" and "Using Joins".
·
Can you have a nested transaction?
o
Yes, very much. Check out BEGIN TRAN,
COMMIT, ROLLBACK, SAVE TRAN and @@TRANCOUNT
·
What is an extended stored procedure? Can
you instantiate a COM object by using T-SQL?
o
An extended stored procedure is a function
within a DLL (written in a programming language like C, C++ using Open Data
Services (ODS) API) that can be called from T-SQL, just the way we call normal
stored procedures using the EXEC statement. See books online to learn how to
create extended stored procedures and how to add them to SQL Server. Yes, you
can instantiate a COM (written in languages like VB, VC++) object from T-SQL by
using sp_OACreate stored procedure. Also see books online for sp_OAMethod,
sp_OAGetProperty, sp_OASetProperty, sp_OADestroy. For an example of creating a
COM object in VB and calling it from T-SQL, see ‘My code library’ section of
this site.
·
What is the system function to get the
current user’s user id?
o
USER_ID(). Also check out other system
functions like USER_NAME(), SYSTEM_USER, SESSION_USER, CURRENT_USER, USER,
SUSER_SID(), HOST_NAME().
·
What are triggers? How many triggers you
can have on a table? How to invoke a trigger on demand?
o
Triggers are special kind of stored
procedures that get executed automatically when an INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE
operation takes place on a table. In SQL Server 6.5 you could define only 3
triggers per table, one for INSERT, one for UPDATE and one for DELETE. From SQL
Server 7.0 onwards, this restriction is gone, and you could create multiple
triggers per each action. But in 7.0 there’s no way to control the order in
which the triggers fire. In SQL Server 2000 you could specify which trigger
fires first or fires last using sp_settriggerorder. Triggers can’t be invoked on
demand. They get triggered only when an associated action (INSERT, UPDATE,
DELETE) happens on the table on which they are defined. Triggers are generally
used to implement business rules, auditing. Triggers can also be used to extend
the referential integrity checks, but wherever possible, use constraints for
this purpose, instead of triggers, as constraints are much faster. Till SQL
Server 7.0, triggers fire only after the data modification operation happens. So
in a way, they are called post triggers. But in SQL Server 2000 you could create
pre triggers also. Search SQL Server 2000 books online for INSTEAD OF triggers.
Also check out books online for ‘inserted table’, ‘deleted table’ and
COLUMNS_UPDATED()
·
There is a trigger defined for INSERT
operations on a table, in an OLTP system. The trigger is written to instantiate
a COM object and pass the newly insterted rows to it for some custom processing.
What do you think of this implementation? Can this be implemented better?
o
Instantiating COM objects is a time
consuming process and since you are doing it from within a trigger, it slows
down the data insertion process. Same is the case with sending emails from
triggers. This scenario can be better implemented by logging all the necessary
data into a separate table, and have a job which periodically checks this table
and does the needful.
·
What is a self join? Explain it with an
example.
o
Self join is just like any other join,
except that two instances of the same table will be joined in the query. Here is
an example: Employees table which contains rows for normal employees as well as
managers. So, to find out the managers of all the employees, you need a self
join.
o
CREATE
TABLE emp ( empid int, mgrid int, empname char(10) )
o
INSERT
emp SELECT 1,2,’Vyas’ INSERT emp SELECT 2,3,’Mohan’ INSERT emp SELECT
3,NULL,’Shobha’ INSERT emp SELECT 4,2,’Shridhar’ INSERT emp SELECT
5,2,’Sourabh’
o
SELECT
t1.empname [Employee], t2.empname [Manager] FROM emp t1, emp t2 WHERE t1.mgrid =
t2.empid Here’s an advanced query using a LEFT OUTER JOIN that even returns the
employees without managers (super bosses)
o
SELECT
t1.empname [Employee], COALESCE(t2.empname, ‘No manager’) [Manager] FROM emp t1
LEFT OUTER JOIN emp t2 ON t1.mgrid = t2.empid
Some more Questions
1. What is a Cartesian product? What causes it?
Expected answer: A Cartesian product is the result of an unrestricted
join of two or more tables. The result set of a three table Cartesian product
will have x * y * z number of rows where x, y, z correspond to the number of
rows in each table involved in the join. It is causes by specifying a table in
the FROM clause without joining it to another table.
2. What is an advantage to using a stored procedure as
opposed to passing an SQL query from an application.
Expected answer: A stored procedure is pre-loaded in memory for faster
execution. It allows the DBMS control of permissions for security purposes. It
also eliminates the need to recompile components when minor changes occur to the
database.
3. What is the difference of a LEFT JOIN and an INNER JOIN
statement?
Expected answer: A LEFT JOIN will take ALL values from the first declared
table and matching values from the second declared table based on the column the
join has been declared on. An INNER JOIN will take only matching values from
both tables
4. When a query is sent to the database and an index is not being used,
what type of execution is taking place?
Expected answer: A table scan.
5. What are the pros and cons of using triggers?
Expected answer: A trigger is one or more statements of SQL that are being
executed in event of data modification in a table to which the trigger
belongs.
Triggers enhance the security, efficiency, and standardization of databases.
Triggers can be beneficial when used: – to check or modify values before
they are actually updated or inserted in the database. This is useful if you
need to transform data from the way the user sees it to some internal database
format. – to run other non-database operations coded in user-defined
functions – to update data in other tables. This is useful for maintaining
relationships between data or in keeping audit trail information. – to check
against other data in the table or in other tables. This is useful to ensure
data integrity when referential integrity constraints aren’t appropriate, or
when table check constraints limit checking to the current table only.
SQL
Servers
- What is a major difference between SQL Server 6.5 and 7.0 platform
wise?
SQL Server
6.5 runs only on Windows NT Server. SQL Server 7.0 runs on Windows NT Server,
workstation and Windows 95/98.
- Is
SQL Server implemented as a service or an application?
It is implemented as a service on Windows NT server
and workstation and as an application on Windows 95/98.
- What
is the difference in Login Security Modes between v6.5 and 7.0?
7.0 doesn't have Standard Mode, only Windows NT
Integrated mode and Mixed mode that consists of both Windows NT Integrated and
SQL Server authentication modes.
- What
is a traditional Network Library for SQL Servers?
Named Pipes
- What
is a default TCP/IP socket assigned for SQL Server?
1433
- If
you encounter this kind of an error message, what you need to look into to
solve this problem? "[Microsoft][ODBC SQL Server Driver][Named Pipes]Specified
SQL Server not found."
1.Check if MS
SQL Server service is running on the computer you are trying to log into
2.Check on Client Configuration utility. Client and Server have to in
sync.
- What
are the two options the DBA has to assign a password to sa?
a) to use SQL statement Use master Exec
sp_password NULL, b) to use Query Analyzer utility
- What
is new philosophy for database devises for SQL Server 7.0?
There are no devises anymore in SQL Server 7.0. It is
file system now.
- When
you create a database how is it stored?
It is stored in two separate files: one file contains
the data, system tables, other database objects, the other file stores the
transaction log.
- Let's
assume you have data that resides on SQL Server 6.5. You have to move it SQL
Server 7.0. How are you going to do it?
You have to use transfer command.
DirectConnect
- Have you ever tested 3 tier applications?
- Do
you know anything about DirectConnect software? Who is a vendor of the
software?
Sybase.
- What
platform does it run on?
UNIX.
- How
did you use it? What kind of tools have you used to test connection?
SQL Server or Sybase client
tools.
- How
to set up a permission for 3 tier application?
Contact System Administrator.
- What
UNIX command do you use to connect to UNIX server?
FTP Server Name
- Do
you know how to configure DB2 side of the application?
Set up an application ID, create RACF group with
tables attached to this group, attach the ID to this RACF group.
Web
Application
- What kind of LAN types do you know?
Ethernet networks and token ring
networks.
- What
is the difference between them?
With
Ethernet, any devices on the network can send data in a packet to any location
on the network at any time. With Token Ring, data is transmitted in 'tokens'
from computer to computer in a ring or star configuration.
Steve Dalton from
ExchangeTechnology: "This is such a common mistake that people make
about TR I didn't want it to propagated further!" Token ring is the IEEE 802.5 standard that connects
computers together in a closed ring. Devices on the ring cannot transmit data
until permission is received from the network in the form of an electronic
'token'. The token is a short message that can be passed around the network
when the owner is finished. At any time, one node owns the token and is free
to send messages. As with Ethernet the messages are packetized. The packet =
start_flag + address + header + message + checksum + stop_flag. The message
packets circulate around the ring until the addressed recipient receives them.
When the sender is finished sending the full message (normally many
packets),he sends the token. An Ethernet message is sent in packets too.
The sending protocol goes like this:
- wait until you see no activity on the network .
- begin sending your message pocket.
- while sending, check simultaneously for interference
(another node wants to send data).
- as long as all clear, continue sending your message.
- if you detect interference abort your transmission,
wait a random length of time and try again.
Token ring speed is 4/16 Mbit/sec ,
Ethernet - 10/100 Mbit/sec For more info see
http://www.flgnetworking.com/usefuli4.html
- What
protocol both networks use? What it stands for?
TCP/IP. Transmission Control Protocol/ Internet
Protocol.
- How
many bits IP Address consist of?
An
IP Address is a 32-bit number.
- How
many layers of TCP/IP protocol combined of?
Five. (Application, Transport, Internet, Data link,
Physical)
- How
to define testing of network layers?
Reviewing with your developers to identify the layers
of the Network layered architecture, your Web client and Web server
application interact with. Determine the hardware and software configuration
dependencies for the application under test.
- How
to test proper TCP/IP configuration Windows machine?
To run command on: Windows NT: IPCONFIG/ALL
Windows 95: WINIPCFG Ping or ping
- What
is a component-based Architecture? How to approach testing of a component
based application?
· Define how many and
what kind of components your application has. · Identify how server-side
components are distributed · Identify How server-side software components
interact with each other · Identify how Web-To- Database connectivity is
implemented · Identify how processing load is distributed between client
and server to prepare for load stress and performance testing · Prepare
for compatibility and reliability testing
- How
to maintain Browser settings?
Go to
Control Panel, Internet Option.
- What
kind of testing considerations you have to have in mind for Security Testing?
In client/server system, every
component carries its own security weaknesses. The primary components
which need to be tested are: · application software · the database
· servers · the client workstations · the network
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Interview
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This page
contains some suggestions for questions to ask when interviewing an
applicant for a Sybase ASE DBA job. There are also some questions the
candidate might want to ask before (s)he takes the job (see the end of
this page). Please bear in mind that these are just some suggestions
which I personally think are relevant. I'm certainly not claiming that
these are the "best" or "most representative" questions you could ask. You
could use these as a starting point and add further questions of your
own.
Questions to ask a candidate
DBA
- What are the most
important DBA tasks ?
In my opinion, these are (in
order of importance): (i) ensure a proper database/log dump schedule for
all databases (including master); (ii) run dbcc checkstorage on all databases
regularly (at least weekly), and follow up any corruption problems
found; (iii) run update [index]
statistics at least weekly on all user
tables; (iv) monitor the server errorlog for messages indicating
problems (daily). Of course, a DBA has many other things to do as well,
such as supporting users & developers, monitor performance, etc.
- What should you
do when you find a stacktrace in the server errorlog ?
Open a case
with Sybase TechSupport. There's not much you can do yourself with this
information, and only TechSupport has the information to determine
whether it's related to a bug, for example. It's not a good idea to
ignore such things in the errorlog -- 'cos it might indeed indicate
you're hitting a bug.
- Is there any
disadvantage of splitting up your application data into a number of
different databases ?
When there are relations
between tables/objects across the different databases, then there is a
disadvantage indeed: if you would restore a dump of one of the
databases, those relations may not be consistent anymore. This means
that you should always back up a consistent set of databases; however,
this may be difficult when the system is continuously in use, because a
single database is the unit of backup/restore. Therefore, when making
this kind of design decision, backup/restore issues should be considered
(and the DBA should be consulted).
- Is it necessary
to drop & recreate all procedures and triggers every few months
?
No; in older Sybase versions
(4.x), this was sometimes necessary, as query plans could grow bigger
over time, hit an upper limit at some point and cause an error. Both the
growing plan and the limit have been removed since at least version 11.0
(or was it already fixed in 10 ? -- I'm not sure...).
- What are the main
advantages and disadvantages of using identity columns
?
The main advantage of an
identity column is that it can generate unique, sequential numbers very
efficiently, requiring only a minimal amount of I/O. The disadvantage is
that the generated values themselves are not transactional, and that the
identity values may jump enourmously when the server is shut down the
rough way (resulting in "identity gaps"). You should therefore only use
identity columns in applications if you've adressed these issues (go
here for more information about identity gaps).
- What do you do
when the server can't start due to a corrupt master database
?
You create a new master
device using buildmaster (on 12.5, use dataserver instead); create a
RUN_SERVER file and start the server in single-user mode (using the -m
option); then manually add an entry for SYB_BACKUP in sysservers; and
then load a database dump of the master database. After that, the server
will automatically shut down; restart it and see if your application
databases are still there.
To turn up the heat a bit: what if
you're using a non-default character set or sort order ? In this
case, things are more complicated: you'll first need to create
sybsystemprocs and change the sort order/charset of newly created master
database before loading the master database dump (thanks to John
Langston for this one).
- When you do a
BCP-in from a file to a table, what happens to triggers, constraints,
rules and defaults on that table ?
For both fast BCP and
'normal' BCP, triggers, constraints and rules are ignored. Defaults will
be effective though (go
here for a nasty, but little-known side effect).
- How do you BCP
only a certain set of rows out of a large table ?
If you're in
ASE 11.5 or later, create a view for those rows and BCP out from the
view. In earlier ASE versions, you'll have to select those rows into a
separate table first and BCP out from that table. In both cases, the
speed of copying the data depends on whether there is a suitable index
for retrieving the rows.
- What's the
difference between managing permissions through users and groups or
through user-defined roles ?
The main difference is
that user-defined roles (introduced in ASE 11.5) are server-wide, and
are granted to logins. Users and groups (the classic method that has
always been there since the first version of Sybase) are limited to a
single database. Permissions can be granted/revoked to both user-defined
roles and users/groups. Whichever method you choose, don't mix 'm, as
the precedence rules are complicated.
- Is there any
advantage in using the 64-bit version of ASE instead of the 32-bit
version ?
The only difference is
that the 64-bit version of ASE can handle a larger data cache than the
32-bit version, so you'd optimize on physical I/O. Therefore, this may
be an advantage if the amount of data cache is currently a bottleneck.
There's no point in using 64-bit ASE with the same amount of "total
memory" as for the 32-bit version, because 64-bit ASE comes with an
additional overhead in memory usage -- so the net amount of data cache
would actually be less for 64-bit than for 32-bit in this case. (Just
for clarity: the 64-bit version is not twice as fast as the
32-bit version, and does not perform its I/O at double the size
of the 32-bit version (I once heard someone state these as facts...)).
- Is it a good idea
to use datarows locking for all tables by
default ?
Not by default; only
if you're having concurrency (locking) problems on a table, and you're
not locking many rows of a table in a single transaction, then you could
consider datarows locking for that table. In
all other cases, use either datapages or allpages locking. (I personally
favor datapages locking as the default lock
scheme for all tables because switching to datarows locking is fast and easy,
whereas for allpages locking, the entire table
has to be converted which may take long for large tables. Also,
datapages locking has other
advantages over allpages, such as not locking index
pages, update
statistics running at level 0, and the
availability of the reorg command).
- What would you do
when the ASE server's performance is bad ?
"Bad performance" is not
a very meaningful term, so you'll need to get a more objective diagnosis
first. Find out (i) what such a complaint is based on (clearly
increasing response times or just a "feeling" that it's slower?), (ii)
for which applications/queries/users this seems to be happening, and
(iii) whether it happens continuously or just incidentally. Without
identifying the specific, reproducable problem, any action is no better
than speculation.
- What do you do
when a segment gets full ?
Wrong: a segment can never
get full (even though some error messages state something to that
extent). A segment is a "label" for one or more database device
fragments; the fragments to which that label has been mapped can get
full, but the segments themselves cannot. (Well, OK, this is a bit of a
trick question... when those device fragments full up, you either add
more space, or clean up old/redundant data.)
- Does the DBA
candidate hold a Sybase Certification ?
If (s)he has, consider that
a plus !
Questions for a candidate DBA to ask your potential
future employer
When you're being interviewed for a DBA
vacancy, there are some things related to the DBA environment you
might want to know as well. I'd suggest to check out at least the
following:
- Does the company
have a Technical Support contract with Sybase ?
A support
contract is required for getting EBFs and for being able to ask
questions about technical problems. Without a support contract, you're
completely on your own; you should ask yourself if your can fulfill the
company's expectations in that case.
- Which version of
ASE are they using, and on which platform ?
This matters: for
example, if they appear to be running 11.0.3 on Data General, find out
if they are aware that both this ASE version and this platform are no
longer supported by Sybase. If they're not planning to upgrade to a
supported version/platform soon, ask yourself if you want to be working
there; you risk being on your own, without support, and with an
out-of-date ASE version that stops you from keeping your ASE knowledge
current.
- How many servers,
database and concurrent users do they have ? What's the database size
like ? Is there a 24*7 uptime
requirement ?
It helps to know which scale you're talking about.
If you're supposed to look after a 500 Gb, never-no-downtime, 3000-user
system, check whether the salary you're being offered is of the same
magnitude as the system.
- Is Sybase
Replication Server involved ?
If it is, and if you
know RepServer, reconsider your financial demands -- upwards, that is.
Reason is that RepServer DBAs are hard to find -- much harder than ASE
DBAs.
- Are you also
supposed to take care of their Oracle, MS-SQL, etc. servers ? Do you
have to manage ASIQ or ASA (SQLAnywhere) as well ?
You may want
to know this in advance rather than find out on your first working
day....
- If you want to
get a Sybase certification (or get a more recent one) will they pay for
this ?
It should make 'm happy
that you're willing to get your certification, 'cos it will make you a
better DBA; try to get them to pay for at least part of it. Tip: if
you're talking to a management person, calling this a "win-win scenario"
might help....
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