Table C (File architecture): Difference between revisions

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<p>In the segment entries, there are two possible references to records:</p>
<p>In the segment entries, there are two possible references to records:</p>


* If, in the segment, there is one and only one record with that combination of field and value, there is a direct pointer to the record (the [[Table B (File Architecture)#Internal Record Number|Internal Record Number (IRN)]] is physically stored in the Table C entry).
* If, in the segment, there is one and only one record with that combination of field and value, there is a direct pointer to the record (the [[Table B (File architecture)#Internal Record Number|Internal Record Number (IRN)]] is physically stored in the Table C entry).
* Otherwise, the segment will point to a [[Table D (File architecture)#List and bitmap pages|list or bitmap page]].
* Otherwise, the segment will point to a [[Table D (File architecture)#List and bitmap pages|list or bitmap page]].



Revision as of 22:18, 18 December 2013

Table C is a hashed table divided into entries of seven bytes each. Table C entries store index information for fields that have the KEY or the NUMERIC RANGE attributes.

This page discusses the architecture underlying Table C. For information on monitoring, tuning and performance issues, refer to Tuning the hash index.

Overview

Model 204 creates a chain of entries in Table C for each value stored in a KEY field and several chains of entries for each value stored in a NUMERIC RANGE field.

Any time a field (whether preallocated or a field value pair) that has the KEY or NUMERIC range attributes is added to a record, the hashing algorithm is used to find a Property Entry. If it is not found it is created.

New KEY values require only two slots in Table C for an initial creation (one Property and one Segment entry). If the file size multiplier (discussed in Computing the file size multiplier (N)) is greater than 1 (signifying the number of segments in the file), KEY values might require more than two slots. Therefore, at a rate dependent upon the level and nature of update activity, the number of slots used increases.

The chain is read (or created) to find the Segment Entry covering the record being updated.

Because of the hashed nature of the contents, Table C may not be increased dynamically. Any changes must be done via a reorganization.

Table C Page Structure

Every Table C page is composed of a series of 7 byte hash cells (a total of 877 per page). It also contains 5 bytes used to track 'spills' (cases where the entry can not be placed on the page that the field / value hashes to).

The hash cells contain one of two types of entry: Property, and Segment.

Property Entries

The starting point of a chain.

When reading or updating a hash index, this is the location the field / value hashes in to. From there, the chain of segment entries are read.

Segment Entries

Chained from the Property Entry are one or more segment entries (see the definition of segment which follows).

In the segment entries, there are two possible references to records:

  • If, in the segment, there is one and only one record with that combination of field and value, there is a direct pointer to the record (the Internal Record Number (IRN) is physically stored in the Table C entry).
  • Otherwise, the segment will point to a list or bitmap page.

It is quite possible that, for a particular field / value, some of the segment pointers will directly point to records; others will point to list or bitmap pages; and some segments, where no records will have the value for this field, will not have an occurrence in the chain at all.

Segment definition

A segment is a set of 49152 base record slots. This 'magic' number comes from the number of bits which fit on a Model 204 page (see List and bitmap pages).