Data Dependency Elicitation in Database Reverse Engineering

Jean Henrard, Jean-Luc Hainaut

Research output: Contribution in Book/Catalog/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

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Abstract

Database reverse engineering (DBRE) attempts to recover the technical and semantic specifications of the persistent data of information systems. Dependencies between records (data dependency) form a major class that need to be recovered. Since most of these dependencies are not supported by the DBMS, (foreign keys are the main exception, at least in modern relational DBMS), they have not be explicitly declared in the database schema. Careless reverse engineering will inevitably ignore them, leading to poor quality conceptual schema. Several information sources can contribute to the elicitation of these hidden dependencies. The program source code has long been considered the richest, but also the most complex, of them. In this paper, we analyze and compare, through their respective quality and cost, different program understanding techniques that can be used to elicit data dependencies.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProc. of the 5th European Conference on Software Maintenance and Reengineering (CSMR 2001)
EditorsP Sousa, J Ebert
Pages11-19
Number of pages9
Publication statusUnpublished - 2001

Keywords

  • program slicing
  • database reverse engineering
  • db-main
  • program understanding

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