A private bank, for instance, Bank Podo, has several branches in numerous American cities. The strategy of Bank Podo emphasizes consumers in distant places, where infrastructural challenges, such as Internet access, are unavoidable. However, given Bank Podo's aim is to serve the archipelago, infrastructural limitations are not a barrier to service delivery. The IT Division decided to construct a distributed database in which each branch has its own database that maintains data especially for that branch, i.e., each branch has its own database. Despite the fact that the databases are independent, each branch may access (share) the data of other branches, giving the impression to the user that all databases are a single entity; this is known as distribution transparency.   We are experienced with difficulties such as fragmentation, allocation, and replication in distributed databases. What sorts of difficulties does Podo Bank contain? What form of fragmentation is used when a customer table is split into tuples and spread over many branches? Describe the fragmentation of the customer table in tabular format and demonstrate compliance with the three requirements (completeness, reconstruction, and disjointness).

Database System Concepts
7th Edition
ISBN:9780078022159
Author:Abraham Silberschatz Professor, Henry F. Korth, S. Sudarshan
Publisher:Abraham Silberschatz Professor, Henry F. Korth, S. Sudarshan
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A private bank, for instance, Bank Podo, has several branches in numerous American cities. The strategy of Bank Podo emphasizes consumers in distant places, where infrastructural challenges, such as Internet access, are unavoidable. However, given Bank Podo's aim is to serve the archipelago, infrastructural limitations are not a barrier to service delivery. The IT Division decided to construct a distributed database in which each branch has its own database that maintains data especially for that branch, i.e., each branch has its own database. Despite the fact that the databases are independent, each branch may access (share) the data of other branches, giving the impression to the user that all databases are a single entity; this is known as distribution transparency.

 

We are experienced with difficulties such as fragmentation, allocation, and replication in distributed databases. What sorts of difficulties does Podo Bank contain?

What form of fragmentation is used when a customer table is split into tuples and spread over many branches? Describe the fragmentation of the customer table in tabular format and demonstrate compliance with the three requirements (completeness, reconstruction, and disjointness).

 

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