Information about Codasyl
CODASYL (often spelt Codasyl) is an acronym for "Conference on Data Systems Languages". This was an IT industry consortium formed in 1959 to guide the development of a standard programming language that could be used on many computers. This effort led to the development of COBOL.
CODASYL's members were individuals from industry and government involved in data processing activity. Its larger goal was to promote more effective data systems analysis, design, and implementation. The organization worked on various languages over the years but never actually standardized one. The standardization process was left to ANSI.
In 1965 CODASYL formed a List Processing Task Force. This group was chartered to develop COBOL language extensions for processing collections of records; the name arose because Charles Bachman's IDS system (which was the main technical input to the project) managed relationships between records using chains of pointers. In 1967 the group renamed itself the Data Base Task Group, and its first report in January 1968 was entitled COBOL extensions to handle data bases. In October 1969 the DBTG published its first language specifications for the network database model which became generally known as the Codasyl Data Model. This specification in fact defined several separate languages: a data description language (DDL) to define the schema of the database, another DDL to create one or more subschemas defining application views of the database; and a data manipulation language
(DML) defining verbs for embedding in the COBOL programming language to request and update data in the database. Although the work was focused on COBOL, the idea of a host-language independent database was starting to emerge, prompted by IBM's advocacy of PL/I as a COBOL replacement.
In 1971, largely in response to the need for programming language independence, the work was reorganized: development of the Data Description Language was continued by the Data Description Language Committee, while the COBOL DML was taken over by the COBOL language committee. With hindsight, this split had unfortunate consequences. The two groups never quite managed to synchronize their specifications, leaving vendors to patch up the differences. The inevitable consequence was a lack of interoperability among implementations.
A number of vendors implemented database products conforming (roughly) to the DBTG specifications: the most well-known implementations were Honeywell's Integrated Data Store (IDS/2), Cullinet's Integrated Database Management System IDMS, Univac's DMS-1100, and Digital Equipment Corporation's DBMS32. Cullinet, originally known as Cullinane, obtained the technology from B.F. Goodrich. Cullinet was eventually sold to Computer Associates, which as of 2007 still sells and supports a version of IDMS.
Some of the CODASYL committees continue their work today, but CODASYL itself no longer exists. The records of CODASYL were donated to the Charles Babbage Institute and may be found at their website.
Interest in CODASYL generally faded due to growing interest in relational databases beginning in the early 1980's.
CODASYL's members were individuals from industry and government involved in data processing activity. Its larger goal was to promote more effective data systems analysis, design, and implementation. The organization worked on various languages over the years but never actually standardized one. The standardization process was left to ANSI.
The record set, basic structure of navigational (e.g. CODASYL) database model. A set consists of one parent record (also called "the owner"), and n child records (also called members records). In the above example, we were looking at a basic set which embodies a 1:N (Parent:Children) relation.[1]
In 1971, largely in response to the need for programming language independence, the work was reorganized: development of the Data Description Language was continued by the Data Description Language Committee, while the COBOL DML was taken over by the COBOL language committee. With hindsight, this split had unfortunate consequences. The two groups never quite managed to synchronize their specifications, leaving vendors to patch up the differences. The inevitable consequence was a lack of interoperability among implementations.
A number of vendors implemented database products conforming (roughly) to the DBTG specifications: the most well-known implementations were Honeywell's Integrated Data Store (IDS/2), Cullinet's Integrated Database Management System IDMS, Univac's DMS-1100, and Digital Equipment Corporation's DBMS32. Cullinet, originally known as Cullinane, obtained the technology from B.F. Goodrich. Cullinet was eventually sold to Computer Associates, which as of 2007 still sells and supports a version of IDMS.
Some of the CODASYL committees continue their work today, but CODASYL itself no longer exists. The records of CODASYL were donated to the Charles Babbage Institute and may be found at their website.
Interest in CODASYL generally faded due to growing interest in relational databases beginning in the early 1980's.
References
1. ^ Waldner, Jean-Baptiste (1992). "CIM: Principles of Computer Integrated Manufacturing, John Wiley & Sons, 1992 ": p47.
- The Codasyl Approach to Data Base Management. T. William Olle. Wiley, 1978. ISBN 0-471-99579-7.
- The Codasyl Model. J. S. Knowles and D. M. R. Bell, in Databases - Role and Structure, ed. P. M. Stocker, P. M. D. Gray, and M. P. Atkinson, CUP, 1984. ISBN 0-521-25430-2
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Acronyms and initialisms are abbreviations, such as NATO, laser, and IBM, that are formed using the initial letters of words or word parts in a phrase or name.
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Information technology (IT), as defined by the Information Technology Association of America (ITAA), is "the study, design, development, implementation, support or management of computer-based information systems, particularly software applications and computer hardware.
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A programming language is an artificial language that can be used to control the behavior of a machine, particularly a computer. Programming languages, like natural languagess, are defined by syntactic and semantic rules which describe their structure and meaning respectively.
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COBOL
Paradigm: multi-paradigm
Appeared in: 1959
Designed by: Grace Hopper, William Selden, Gertrude Tierney, Howard Bromberg, Howard Discount, Vernon Reeves, Jean E.
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Paradigm: multi-paradigm
Appeared in: 1959
Designed by: Grace Hopper, William Selden, Gertrude Tierney, Howard Bromberg, Howard Discount, Vernon Reeves, Jean E.
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American National Standards Institute or ANSI (IPA pronunciation: [ænsiː]) is a private nonprofit organization that oversees the development of voluntary consensus standards for products, services, processes,
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Charles W. Bachman
Born November 11 1924
Manhattan, Kansas
Nationality American
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Born November 11 1924
Manhattan, Kansas
Nationality American
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Integrated Data Store (IDS) is a network database largely used by industry for its performance.
IDS was designed by Charles Bachman at General Electric in the 1960s.
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IDS was designed by Charles Bachman at General Electric in the 1960s.
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Year 1968 (MCMLXVIII
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The network model is a database model conceived as a flexible way of representing objects and their relationships. Its original inventor was Charles Bachman, and it was developed into a standard specification published in 1969 by the CODASYL Consortium.
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A Logical Schema is a data model of a specific problem domain that is in terms of a particular data management technology. Without being specific to a particular database management product, it is in terms of either (for example, in 2007) relational tables and columns,
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International Business Machines Corporation
Public (NYSE: IBM )
Founded 1889, incorporated 1911
Headquarters Armonk, New York, USA
Key people Samuel J.
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Public (NYSE: IBM )
Founded 1889, incorporated 1911
Headquarters Armonk, New York, USA
Key people Samuel J.
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PL/I
Paradigm: imperative, structured
Appeared in: 1964
Designed by: Hursley Laboratories
Developer: IBM
Dialects: PL/M, XPL, PL/P, PL/C, PL/S, PL/AS, PL/X, PL/8, EPL
Influenced by: COBOL, Fortran, ALGOL,
PL/I
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Paradigm: imperative, structured
Appeared in: 1964
Designed by: Hursley Laboratories
Developer: IBM
Dialects: PL/M, XPL, PL/P, PL/C, PL/S, PL/AS, PL/X, PL/8, EPL
Influenced by: COBOL, Fortran, ALGOL,
PL/I
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Honeywell International, Inc.
Public
Founded 1906, 1999 by merger with AlliedSignal
Headquarters Morristown, New Jersey
Products Aerospace & Defense , Automation & Control Solutions , Specialty Materials
Revenue $31.4 billion USD (2006)
Net income $ 2.
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Public
Founded 1906, 1999 by merger with AlliedSignal
Headquarters Morristown, New Jersey
Products Aerospace & Defense , Automation & Control Solutions , Specialty Materials
Revenue $31.4 billion USD (2006)
Net income $ 2.
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IDMS (Integrated Database Management System) is a (network) CODASYL database management system first developed at B.F. Goodrich and later marketed by Cullinane Database Systems (renamed Cullinet in 1983).
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Digital Equipment Corporation was a pioneering American company in the computer industry. It is often referred to within the computing industry as DEC. (This acronym was frequently officially used by Digital itself,[1] but the official name was always DIGITAL.
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Cullinet was a software company whose main product was the database management system, IDMS. In 1989, the company was bought by Computer Associates. Cullinet was headquartered at 400 Blue Hill Drive in Westwood, Massachusetts.
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Goodrich Corporation
Public (NYSE: GR )
Founded 1870 in Akron, Ohio
Headquarters Charlotte, North Carolina
Key people Marshall Larsen, CEO & Chairman
Industry Aerospace
Products Nacelles and Interior Systems
Actuation and Landing Systems
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Public (NYSE: GR )
Founded 1870 in Akron, Ohio
Headquarters Charlotte, North Carolina
Key people Marshall Larsen, CEO & Chairman
Industry Aerospace
Products Nacelles and Interior Systems
Actuation and Landing Systems
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CA, Inc.
Public (NYSE: CA )
Founded 1976
Headquarters Islandia, New York, USA
Key people William E. McCracken, Chairman, John A. Swainson, President & CEO, Michael J Christenson, COO, Yogesh Gupta
Industry Application software
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Public (NYSE: CA )
Founded 1976
Headquarters Islandia, New York, USA
Key people William E. McCracken, Chairman, John A. Swainson, President & CEO, Michael J Christenson, COO, Yogesh Gupta
Industry Application software
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The Charles Babbage Institute (also titled the Center for the History of Information Technology) is a research center at the University of Minnesota specializing in the history of information technology, particularly the post-
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A relational database is a database that conforms to the relational model, and refers to a database's data and schema (the database's structure of how that data is arranged).
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Navigational databases incorporate both the network model and hierarchical model of database interfaces and have evolved into Set-oriented systems [1]. Navigational techniques use "pointers" and "paths" to navigate among data records (also known as "nodes").
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