“Diffing” objects from a relational database

不羁的心 提交于 2019-12-03 00:11:10

Assume that a class has 5 known properties - date, time, subject, outline, location. When I look at my schedule, I'm most interested in the most recent (ie current/accurate) version of these properties. It would also be useful for me to know what, if anything, has changed. (As a side note, if the date, time or location changed, I'd also expect to get an email/sms advising me in case I don't check for an updated schedule :-))

I would suggest that the 'diff' is performed at the time the schedule is amended. So, when version 2 of the class is created, record which values have changed, and store this in two 'changelog' fields on the version 2 object (there must already be one parent table that sits atop all your tables - use that one!). One changelog field is 'human readable text' eg 'Date changed from Mon 1 May to Tues 2 May, Time changed from 10:00am to 10:30am'. The second changelog field is a delimted list of changed fields eg 'date,time' To do this, before saving you would loop over the values submitted by the user, compare to current database values, and concatenate 2 strings, one human readable, one a list of field names. Then, update the data and set your concatenated strings as the 'changelog' values.

When displaying the schedule load the current version by default. Loop through the fields in the changelog field list, and annotate the display to show that the value has changed (a * or a highlight, etc). Then, in a separate panel display the human readable change log.

If a schedule is amended more than once, you would probably want to combine the changelogs between version 1 & 2, and 2 & 3. Say in version 3 only the course outline changed - if that was the only changelog you had when displaying the schedule, the change to date and time wouldn't be displayed.

Note that this denormalised approach won't be great for analysis - eg working out which specific location always has classes changed out of it - but you could extend it using an E-A-V model to store the change log.

Just an idea, but would it be worthwhile for you to convert the two object versions being compared to some text format and then comparing these text objects using an existing diff program - like diff for example? There are lots of nice diff programs out there that can offer nice visual representations, etc.

So for example

Text version of Object 1:

first_name: Harry
last_name: Lime
address: Wien
version: 0.1

Text version of Object 2:

first_name: Harry
last_name: Lime
address: Vienna
version: 0.2

The diff would be something like:

3,4c3,4
< address: Wien
< version: 0.1
---
> address: Vienna
> version: 0.2

Doing a comparison at the database level would be good if what you cared about was changes to the database. That makes the most sense if you're trying to design a layer of generic functionality on top of the database itself.

Doing a comparison at the object level would be good if you care about changes to the data. For example, if the data was the input to a program and you were interested in looking at changes in the input to verify that changes to the output were correct.

Your use case doesn't appear to be either of these. You appear to care about the output and want differences from that perspective. If that's the case, I would do differences on the output report (or a pure-text version of it) instead of on the underlying data. You can do that with any off-the-shelf diff tool. To make things easier for your end-users you could parse the diff results and render them as HTML. There are lots of options here: side-by-side with color coding to indicate changes, one document with markup for changes (e.g. red strikethrough for deletions and green for additions), maybe just highlight areas that have changed and use balloons to show the previous/current values on demand.

I've thought about doing database comparisons but never tried to implement it. As you noted, any such attempts are intimately intertwined with the schema.

I have done object-level comparisons. The general algorithm was this:

  1. Do a set comparison on the lists of object IDs. This creates three result groupings: added objects, deleted objects, and objects that live in both sets.
  2. Report the deletions.
  3. Report the additions.
  4. For the things in both sets, do an attribute-by-attribute comparison.
  5. If any differences are found, report the object ID, the attributes that differ, and the respective values. If appropriate, highlight the portion of the attribute value that has changed.

In my case, the comparison algorithms were hand-written to match the object attributes. This gave me control over which attributes were compared and how. A generic comparator might be possible for some cases but would depend on the situation and at least partially on the implementation language.

I've looked into MysQL Diffing a number of times. Unfortunately, there aren't any really good solutions available.

One tool I've tried was mysqldiff (www.mysqldiff.org). mysqldiff is a tool written in PHP which is capable of diffing mysql schemas. Unfortunately, it doesn't do a great job a lot of the time.

MySQL Workbench, MySQLs own SQL IDE provides the option to generate an alter script and I would imagine it does this by performing some kind of diff operation internally.

Aqua Data Studio is another tool that is capable of comparing schemas and outputing a diff of the two. While the ADS diff is quite nice, it does not provide a tool to create an alter script.

If I were writing my own I guess I would write code capable of comparing structure of two tables. Such code could be tuned to be highly sensitive (Ig if column order differs from from version to the next, it's a difference) or more moderately sensitive (Eg Column order is not a major issue, datatypes and lengths are important, as are indices and constraints).

Storage, I'm not to sure. I would look into how a version control system such as Mercurial stores its diff information for revisions and use that to elaborate a method appropriate for the DB.

Finally, for visual output I recommend you take a look at the Aqua Data Stduio compare feature (You can use the Trial version to test this...). Its diff output is pretty good.

My application dbscript compares hierarchical data (database schemas) in a stored procedure, which of course has to compare each field/property of every object with its counterpart. I guess you won't get around that step (unless you have a generic object description model)

As for the UI part of your question, have a look at screenshots to view and select differences.

I would think about some sort of common text representation of the objects and let the texts compare with an existing diffing tool like WinMerge.

I see no need to invent diffing by myself since there are already plenty of nice tools I can use.

In your situation in PostgreSQL I used a difference tables with the schema:

history_columns (
    column_id smallint primary key,
    column_name text not null,
    table_name text not null,
    unique (table_name, column_name)
);
create temporary sequence column_id_seq;
insert into history_columns
select nextval('column_id_seq'), column_name, table_name
    from information_schema.columns
    where
        table_name in ('table1','table2','table3')
        and table_schema=current_schema() and table_catalog=current_database();

create table history (
    column_id smallint not null references history_columns,
    id int not null,
    change_time timestamp with time zone not null
        constraint change_time_full_second -- only one change allowed per second
            check (date_trunc('second',change_time)=change_time),
    primary key (column_id,id,change_time),
    value text
);

And on the tables I used a trigger like this:

create or replace function save_history() returns trigger as
$$
    if (tg_op = 'DELETE') then
        insert into historia values (
            find_column_id('id',tg_relname), OLD.id,
            date_trunc('second',current_timestamp),
            OLD.id );
        [for each column_name] {
            if (char_length(OLD.column_name)>0) then
                insert into history values (
                    find_column_id(column_name,tg_relname), OLD.id,
                    OLD.change_time, OLD.column_name
                )
        }
    elsif (tg_op = 'UPDATE') then
        [for each column_name] {
            if (OLD.column_name is distinct from NEW.column_name) then
                insert into history values (
                    find_column_id(column_name,tg_relname), OLD.id,
                    OLD.change_time, OLD.column_name
                );
            end if;
        }
    end if;
$$ language plpgsql volatile;

create trigger save_history_table1
    before update or delete on table1
    for each row execute procedure save_history();

This isn't really an answer to the question you asked rather an attempt to re-imagine the problem. Would you consider altering your database and object model to store the aggregate root and a series of deltas? That is, model and store RevisionSets that are collections of Revisions; a Revision is an entity property paired with a value. In a sense this is internalizing the revision structure into your architecture that the other posters are suggesting that you bolt-on to what you already have via "logs".

It's trivial to display the aggregate from the deltas, and even easier to display the deltas as a change history. The fact that you are using a rich client with state and local memory makes this even more compelling. You could very easily display "all the changes since date xxxx" without revisiting the database.

Credit for the basic idea goes to Greg Young and his work with financial data streams, but it is imminently applicable to your problem.

I'm riffing off of what Harry Lime suggested: Output your properties to text format, then hash the results. That way you can compare the hash values and easily flag the data that has been altered. This way you get the best of both worlds as you can visually see differences but programmatically identify differences. With the has you'll have a good source for an index should you want to store and retrieve the deltas.

Given you want to create a UI for this and need to indicate where the differences are, it seems to me you can either go custom or create a generic object comparer - the latter being dependent on the language you are using.

For the custom method, you need to create a class that takes to two instances of the classes to be comparied. It then returns differences;

 public class Person
 {
     public string name;
 }

 public class PersonComparer
 {
     public PersonComparer(Person old, Person new)
     {
        ....         
     }

     public bool NameIsDifferent() { return old.Name != new.Name; }
     public string NameDifferentText() { return NameIsDifferent() ? "Name changed from " + old.Name + " to " + new.Name : ""; }
 }

This way you can use the NameComparer object to create your GUI.

The gereric approach would be much the same, just that you generalize the calls, and use object insepection (getObjectProperty call below) to find differences;

 public class ObjectComparer()
 {
    public ObjectComparer(object old, object new)
    {
        ...
    }

    public bool PropertyIsDifferent(string propertyName) { return getObjectProperty(old, propertyName) != getObjectProperty(new, propertyName) };

     public string PropertyDifferentText(string propertyName) { return PropertyIsDifferent(propertyName) ? propertyName + " " + changed from " + getObjectProperty(old, propertyName) + " to " + getObjectProperty(new, propertyName): ""; }
 }
}

I would go for the second, as it makes things really easy to change GUI on needs. The GUI I would try 'yellowing' the differences to make them easy to see - but that depends on how you want to show the differences.

Getting the object to compare would be loading your object with the initial revision and latest revision.

My 2 cents... Not as techy as the database compare stuff already here.

Have you looked at Open Source DiffKit?

www.diffkit.org

I think it does what you want.

Example with Oracle.

  • Export ordered objects to text with dbms_metadata
  • Export ordered tables data into CSV or query format
  • Make big text file
  • Diff
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