Timothy, Tom:

> >1. a. Create new record with new key value in hosts table with the
> >desired value
> >   b. Update the routes record to reference the new value
> >   c. Delete the old record in the hosts table
> >
> 
> Yes, that's what I tried.
> 
> 1. foo.old.com exists in "hosts" table and "routes" table
> 2. create foo.new.com in "hosts" table
> 3. delete foo.old.com in "routes" table
> 4. add foo.new.com into "routes" table
> 5. try to delete foo.old.com and it complains!

Tom - not to interrupt your coding :-) this sounds like a bug.  Any
thoughts?  

> >2. a. Drop the Foriegn Key constraint
> >   b. Update both the routes and hosts tables
> >   c. Re-establish the foriegn key constraint
> 
> This is the part that I'm fuzzy on.  I've tried this before
> with complete DB corruption resulting. I had to dump each table
> one by one, edit my schema with vi, create new DB, import tables
> one by one....very painful!

This also sounds like a problem.  One should be able to drop a
constraint, the re-create the restraint and check existing records
against it.  You can do this in MSSQL and Oracle.

> PPS. As I replied to Stephan, I'm contracting at a company and I
> don't have access to e-mail.  Taking a schema home is NOT OK.
> I already asked the manager if I could GPL my DNS-DB implementation.
> As you might expect, the non-technical manager, didn't know what
> GPL was, and he was NOT going to allow my work to be released to
> public....    And of course, higher ups in company may decide that
> my solution breaks the "don't build if you can buy" policy,  in which
> case all of my work is for naught!  ARGH!!!!!!

Well, if they don't use it, you can easily re-create your work at home
and GPL it.  It also depends on the contract you signed ...

                                        -Josh
-- 
______AGLIO DATABASE SOLUTIONS___________________________
                                        Josh Berkus
   Complete information technology      [EMAIL PROTECTED]
    and data management solutions       (415) 436-9166
   for law firms, small businesses       fax  436-0137
    and non-profit organizations.       pager 338-4078
                                        San Francisco

Reply via email to