I’m looking for input on a database design question. 

Suppose you have an application that allows the user to add some kind of field 
to the application („custom fields“, „user defined fields“, „extended fields“, 
…), which could be of different types (eg string, int, bool, date, array of 
<any other type>, …), and which would have some additional properties (like a 
display name or description, or some access control flags).

The application would need to be able to do CRUD on field content, and 
potentially use them in queries („search in custom field“ or similar). It’s not 
expected to be a high-transaction database, and not go beyond ~100k records. 
Data integrity is more important than performance.


How would you design this from a DB point of view? I see a few options, but all 
have some drawbacks:

1) Allow the application to add actual database columns to a „custom fields 
table". Drawback: needs DDL privileges for the application user, makes future 
schema updates potentially more difficult. Pro: „proper“ DB-based approach, can 
use all features of the DB.

2) Use a text-based or JSON field to store the „extended“ data. Drawback: type 
validation, query efficiency?. Pro: Very flexible?

3) Use a „data table“ with one column per potential type (fieldid, valstring, 
valint, valbool, …). Drawback: complex to query, waste of storage? Pro: use all 
DB features on „true“ columns, but without needing DDL privileges.

Are these the right drawbacks and pro arguments? Do you see other options?

Thanks for your insights,
— Matthias

-- 
Matthias Leisi
Katzenrütistrasse 68, 8153 Rümlang
Mobile +41 79 377 04 43
matth...@leisi.net

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