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Data Warehouse

A subject-oriented, integrated, time-variant, non-


updatable collection of data used in support of
management decision-making processes
Subject-oriented
Data warehouse is organized around the key subjects of the enterprise
e.g. customers, patients, students, products
Integrated:
Consistent naming conventions, formats, encoding structures; from
multiple data sources
Time-variant:
Data contain a time dimension: may be used to study trends and
changes
Non-updatable:
Read-only, periodically refreshed
Data Mart
A data warehouse that is limited in scope


Data warehousing is the process whereby
organizations create and maintain data
warehouses and extract meaning and inform
decision making from their informational assets
through these data warehouse

Introduction
Applications that data warehouse supports are:
OLAP (Online Analytical Processing) is a term used to
describe the analysis of complex data from the data
warehouse.
DSS (Decision Support Systems) also known as EIS
(Executive Information Systems) supports
organizations leading decision makers for making
complex and important decisions.
Data Mining is used for knowledge discovery, the
process of searching data for unanticipated new
knowledge.
1. A business requires integrated, company-wide view
of high-quality information (from different
databases)
2. IS department must separate informational from
operational systems to improve performance in
managing company.

For decision making: necessary to provide a
single, corporate view of the information
Example of the difficulty of deriving a single
corporate view
Examples of heterogeneous data
From Class Registration System
From Personnel System
From Health Centre System
Issues need to be resolved:
Inconsistent key structures
Synonyms
Free-form fields versus structured fields
Inconsistent data values
Missing data


Why organizations need to bring data together
from various systems of record?
More profitable
More competitive
To grow by adding value for customers
Accomplished by:
Increasing speed and flexibility of decision making
Improving business processes
Gaining a clear understanding of customer behavior
Operational system:
a system that is used to run a business in real time,
based on current data; also called a system of record
Must process large volumes of relatively simple
read/write transactions, while providing fast response.
Example: sales order processing, reservation systems
Informational system
a system designed to support decision making based on
historical point-in-time and prediction data for complex
queries or data-mining applications
Example: Sales trend analysis, customer segmentation
Data Warehouse Architectures
Independent Data Mart
Dependent Data Mart and Operational
Data Store
Logical Data Mart and Real-Time Data
Warehouse
Three-Layer architecture

Al l i nvol ve some f or m of ext r act i on,
t r a n s f o r ma t i o n a n d l o a d i n g ( E T L )
Data Mart
A data warehouse that is limited in scope, whose
data are obtained by selecting and summarizing
data from a data warehouse or from separate
extract, transform and load processes from data
source systems.
Independent Data Mart
A data mart filled with data extracted from
the operational environment without
benefit of a data warehouse
Four basic steps:
1. Data are extracted from various internal and
external source system files and databases
2. Data are transformed and integrated before
being loaded into the data marts
Transactions may be sent to the source systems to
correct errors discovered in data staging
Data Warehouse collection of data marts
Independent Data Mart
Four basic steps (continue):
3. Data warehouse is a set of physically distinct
databases organized for decision support.
Contains both detailed and summary data
4. Users access the data warehouse by means of a
variety of query languages and analytical tools.
Results may be fed back to data warehouse and
operational databases.
Independent data mart data warehousing architecture
Data marts:
Mini-warehouses, limited in scope
E
T
L
Separate ETL for each
independent data mart
Data access complexity
due to multiple data marts
Independent Data Mart
Several limitations:
1. A separate ETL processes is developed for each data
mart
2. Data marts may not be consistent with one another
3. No capability to drill down into greater detail or into
related facts in other data marts
4. Scaling costs are excessive because every new
application, which creates a separate data mart,
repeats all the extract and load steps.
5. Cost to make the separate data marts consistent are
quite high.
Dependent Data Mart and
Operational Data Store
Operational Data Store:
An integrated, subject-oriented, continuously updatable,
current-valued (with recent history), enterprise-wide, detailed
database designed to serve operational users as they do
decision making
Enterprise Data Warehouse (EDW):
A centralized, integrated data warehouse that is the control
point and single source of all data made available to end users
for decision support applications
Dependent Data Mart (from EDW):
A data mart filled exclusively from the enterprise data
warehouse and its reconciled
Dependent data mart with operational data store: a three-level architecture
E
T
L
Single ETL for
enterprise data warehouse (EDW)
Simpler data access
ODS provides option for
obtaining current data
Dependent data marts
loaded from EDW
Logical Data Mart and Real-Time
Data Warehouse
Logical data mart:
A data mart created by a relational view of a data
warehouse.
Real-Time Data Warehouse:
An enterprise data warehouse that accepts near-real-
time feeds of transactional data from the systems of
record, analyzes warehouse data, and in near-real-
time relays business rules to the data warehouse and
systems of record so that immediate action can be
taken in response to business events.
E
T
L
Near real-time ETL for
Data Warehouse
ODS and data warehouse
are one and the same
Data marts are NOT separate databases,
but logical views of the data warehouse
Easier to create new data marts
Logical data mart and real time warehouse architecture
Data Warehouse Versus Data Mart
Three-Layer architecture
Operational data are stored in the various operational
systems of record throughout the organization
Reconciled data are the type of data stored in the enterprise
data warehouse and an operational data store
Reconciled data: detailed, current data intended to be the
single, source for all decision support applications
Derived data are the type of data stored in each of the data
marts
Derived data: data that have been selected, formatted and
aggregated for end-user decision support applications.

Three-layer data architecture for a data warehouse
Three-Layer architecture: Role of the
Enterprise Data Model
Enterprise Data Model: Presents a total picture
explaining the data required by an organization.
Reconciled Data: must conform to the design
specified in the EDM
EDM: controls the phased evolution of the DW
Three-Layer architecture: Role of Metadata
Metadata: technical and business data that describe the
properties or characteristics of other data
Operational metadata
Describe the data in the various operational systems
(including the external data) that feed the EDW
EDW metadata
Derived from EDM. Describe the reconciled data layer
as well as the rules for extracting, transforming and
loading operational data into reconciled data
Data mart metadata
Described the derived data layer and the rules for
transforming reconciled data to derived data
Data Characteristics:
Status vs. Event Data
Status
Status
Event = a database action
(create/update/delete) that
results from a transaction
Example of DBMS log entry
Data Characteristics: Transient vs.
Periodic Data
With transient
data, changes
to existing
records are
written over
previous
records, thus
destroying the
previous data
content
Transient
operational data
Data Characteristics: Transient vs.
Periodic Data
Periodic
data are
never
physically
altered or
deleted
once they
have
been
added to
the store
Periodic
warehouse data
Derived Data
Objectives
Ease of use for decision support applications
Fast response to predefined user queries
Customized data for particular target audiences
Ad-hoc query support
Data mining capabilities
Characteristics
Detailed (mostly periodic) data
Aggregate (for summary)
Distributed (to departmental servers)
Most common data model = dimensional model
(usually implemented as a star schema)

A simple database design in which dimensional
data are separated from fact or event data.
A dimensional model: another name for star
schema
Suited ad hoc queries
Not suited to online transaction processing: not
used in operational systems, operational data
stores or an EDW.
Components of a star schema
Fact tables contain factual or
quantitative data
Dimension tables contain descriptions
about the subjects of the business
1:N relationship between
dimension tables and fact tables
Excellent for ad-hoc queries, but bad for online transaction processing
Dimension tables are denormalized to
maximize performance
Star schema example
Fact table provides statistics for sales
broken down by product, period and
store dimensions
Figure A: Star schema with sample data
Dimension table keys should be surrogate (non-
intelligent and non-business related), because:

Business keys may change over time
Helps keep track of nonkey attribute values for a
given production key
Surrogate keys are simpler and shorter
Surrogate keys can be same length and format
for all key
Granularity of Fact Tablewhat level of detail do you
want?

Transactional grainfinest level
Aggregated grainmore summarized
Finer grains better market basket analysis capability
Finer grain more dimension tables, more rows in fact
table
In Web-based commerce, finest granularity is a click
Natural duration13 months or 5 quarters

Financial institutions may need longer duration

Older data is more difficult to source and cleanse

Depends on the number of dimensions and the grain of
the fact table
Number of rows = product of number of possible values
for each dimension associated with the fact table
Example: assume the following for Figure A:



Total rows calculated as follows (assuming only half the
products record sales for a given month):


Estimate the size(in bytes) for fact table: Sales
6 fields each four bytes
Total size of the fact table:
Total size = 120,000,000 rows x 6 fields x 4 bytes/field
= 2,880,000,000 bytes @ 2.88 gb
Total rows (month)


Total rows (daily)
Total rows = 1000 stores x 5000 active products x 720 days
= 3,600,000,000 rows

Multiple Facts Tables
Can improve performance
Often used to store facts for different combinations of dimensions
Conformed dimensions: one or more dimension tables associated
with two or more fact tables for which the dimension tables have the
same business meaning and primary key with each fact table.
Factless Facts Tables
No nonkey data, but foreign keys for associated
dimensions
Used for:
Tracking events
Inventory coverage
Tools to query and analyze data stored in data
warehouses and data marts:
Traditional query and reporting tools
Online Analytical Processing (OLAP), MOLAP, ROLAP
Data Visualization Tools
Data visualizationrepresenting data in
graphical/multimedia formats for analysis
Data Mining Tools
Data Mining -Knowledge discovery using a blend of
statistical, AI, and computer graphics techniques

Identify subjects of the data mart
Identify dimensions and facts
Indicate how data is derived from enterprise data
warehouses, including derivation rules
Indicate how data is derived from operational data
store, including derivation rules
Identify available reports and predefined queries
Identify data analysis techniques (e.g. drill-down)
Identify responsible people

The use of a set of graphical tools that provides users
with multidimensional views of their data and allows
them to analyze the data using simple windowing
techniques
General term for several categories of data warehouse
and data mart access tools.
Relational OLAP (ROLAP)
Traditional relational representation
Use variations of SQL and view the database as a
traditional relational database
Multidimensional OLAP (MOLAP)
Cube structure
Load data into an intermediate structure , usually a three
or higher dimensional array (hypercube)
OLAP Operations
Cube slicingcome up with 2-D view of data
OLAP Operations
Drill-downgoing from summary to more detailed views

Starting with summary
data, users can obtain
details for particular
cells

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