Ken, that's actually... Really, really cool!
Thanks for taking the time to write this, I'm currently wrapping my head around how to incorporate it in The Perfect DBMS Independent Audit Trail™ :-).

On the same note; does anyone know if Wonder's audit trail is any good?

Cheers,
- Hugi

// Hugi Thordarson
// http://hugi.karlmenn.is/



On 19.12.2008, at 18:58, Ken Anderson wrote:

I use a hybrid approach...

I use the database to copy every row modified or deleted to an audit table. Every object has a trans_id field, which is a foreign key relationship to a transaction table. The primary key of that table increases like regular unique integer primary keys.

In EOF, I have sub-entities of all my EOs that have a prefix (like Aud...). These EOs are also subclasses of their main counterparts, then have an imported text file that represents the code I want all audit EOs to share (here's a good case for multiple inheritance!).

The Aud.. EOs have an additional real column called resp_trans_id (the transaction RESPonsible for causing the row to move to the audit table), plus an additional 'fictitious' attribute called 'asof_trans_id'. This is the trans_id that you want the entire object structure to be 'as of'.

The primary key of the audit EOs is the oid AND asof_trans_id so you can have multiple historical audit EOs in the EC.

The Aud EOs then have store procedures for fetching single objects (faulting), that respects the asof_trans_id. The stored procedure finds the right object for that asof_trans_id. For instance, if I have a fault:

AudOrder  oid = 72, asof_trans_id = 155

the stored proc first checks to see if the trans_id of the primary Order table is less than 155. If it is, then this object hasn't changed since trans_id 155, and the primary row is returned (but an AudOrder object is still the object created). If not, we find the audit row who's trans_id is less than or equal to 155. If none exists, the fault fails.

In the AudOrder entity, you can decide whether to override existing relationships (like items) to be from audits, or for reference data, you could just keep the original relationship. For to-many audit relationships, you need another stored proc that will build the unique set, and the asof_trans_id value has to travel along (part of the relationship keys). So, the items relationship would be replaced with an items relationship to AudItem. The stored procedure would build a result set that includes all the items ASOF trans_id 155 (a union between the primary table and the audit table).

Primary entities have a method called 'auditObjects' that goes out and gets all the historical versions of an object.

Whew!

OK - NOW, you have the ability to say:

I have this order EO.  Give me the top 10 historical versions...

You'll get an array of 10 AudOrder objects, which you can present to the user.

You can display the date/time of the transaction record that the audit is related to, so the user can pick the version of history they want.

Now that the user has selected an AudOrder object, when you fire the items to-many fault, it runs the stored proc that builds the union of unique objects that existed asof trans_id 155.

You can keep going and going, faulting more historical objects over time.

Cool, huh?

Ken



On Dec 19, 2008, at 12:25 PM, Hugi Thordarson wrote:

I considered that, it is a good approach since it would log all changes to the DB regardless of the application used to access it. But it falls short since creating an interface to access that old data is complex (meaning that we'd have to create a separate non-WO (or heaviliy modified EOF) application to access old data, or relegate all requests for old data to DBAs, which is not an option). Unless you know something I don't :-).

What we need is a simple way for (all) users to see modifications logs for all records; Who changed What When.

Besides, I want to do this in a non-database-dependent fashion. We're currently using Oracle (which is serious overkill for our application) and we're bleeding money through our back ends for it.

Cheers,
- Hugi




On 19.12.2008, at 17:05, Dov Rosenberg wrote:

Most of the projects I worked on with this requirement used the built in audit tracking functions of the database. Most DBA’s didn’t leave the requirement to the developers to enforce. That way everything is tracked in a consistent fashion across applications.

Dov Rosenberg


On 12/19/08 11:57 AM, "Hugi Thordarson" <h...@karlmenn.is> wrote:

Well, for each off-topic post, I guess you must send at least one on-topic post :-).

So, I work on government databases, and a big part of our requirements revolves around keeping track of changes. We need to know exactly how our databases looked at some point in time, and we need to know who made what modifications when.

So I'm curious about how people are implementing transaction logging. Attached is a (simplified version of a) class that demonstrates how I do this today - you can plug it into your application by calling Spy.register(), for example in yor application constructor (Oh - and you should probably change the createAndInsertTransactionForEO() method to use something other than that EO class called "Transaction" ;-).

Does anyone have any transaction logging stories, examples or code to share? What is the best way to do this?

Cheers,
- Hugi

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