I kind of understand materialized views and have worked with them before. Recently a question came up as to why a particular report didn't show latest data, I looked into the issue. Apparently, they had a temp table loaded with crontab earlier and switched to Materialized view later.
When I looked into the database with the below query (name of the table changed):
SELECT * FROM all_objects WHERE object_name = 'TEMP_DATA';
This actually showed 2 objects in the same schema: one table and another materialized view
OWNER OBJECT_NAME OBJECT_TYPE DATA_OBJECT_ID LAST_DDL_TIME TIMESTAMP
SCHEMA TEMP_DATA TABLE 110623 08/06/2013 15:38 2013-08-06:14:53:01
SCHEMA TEMP_DATA MATERIALIZED VIEW 10/30/2015 00:00 2013-08-06:14:56:33
And, when I try to alter the table to rename it, it said materialized view cannot be renamed.
My question is, whether a materialized view actually creates a table with the same name and if so, when I do SELECT
where does the data come from (table or MView)?
Or is it just the leftover table from earlier times? If so, does Oracle allow different type of objects with the same name? (I was really stumped by this, as I thought every object had to have a unique name!).
And just curious, if they are 2 objects, which one is used in the below SQL:
SELECT * FROM TEMP_DATA;
Any insight into it, much appreciated.
UPDATE based on @Alex and @Husqvik's responses: In the Mview definition, I see below:
BUILD IMMEDIATE
REFRESH COMPLETE
START WITH TO_DATE('06-Nov-2015','dd-mon-yyyy')
NEXT trunc(sysdate) + 1
WITH PRIMARY KEY
Does that mean it should update everyday (here tomorrow)? Will the START WITH change to 07-Nov after tomorrow's refresh?
And, does it automatically refresh and if so, when does it do the refresh?
Is there anything that would prevent it from refreshing, because the user complained they don't see the latest data in a report using this MView and that's why I got this to look at this in the first place?
Here is the full DDL for the MView:
DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW SCHEMA.TEMP_DATA;
CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW SCHEMA.TEMP_DATA
TABLESPACE ITS_DATASPACE
PCTUSED 0
PCTFREE 10
INITRANS 2
MAXTRANS 255
STORAGE (
INITIAL 64K
NEXT 1M
MINEXTENTS 1
MAXEXTENTS UNLIMITED
PCTINCREASE 0
BUFFER_POOL DEFAULT
)
NOCACHE
LOGGING
NOCOMPRESS
NOPARALLEL
BUILD IMMEDIATE
REFRESH COMPLETE
START WITH TO_DATE('06-Nov-2015','dd-mon-yyyy')
NEXT trunc(sysdate) + 1
WITH PRIMARY KEY
AS
/* Formatted on 2015/11/05 09:35 (Formatter Plus v4.8.8) */
SELECT *
FROM SCHEMA.h_case_data
WHERE status LIKE 'M%';
COMMENT ON MATERIALIZED VIEW SCHEMA.TEMP_DATA IS 'snapshot table for snapshot SCHEMA.TEMP_DATA';
CREATE INDEX SCHEMA.CASE_ID_IDX ON SCHEMA.TEMP_DATA
(CASE_ID)
LOGGING
TABLESPACE ITS_DATASPACE
PCTFREE 10
INITRANS 2
MAXTRANS 255
STORAGE (
INITIAL 64K
NEXT 1M
MINEXTENTS 1
MAXEXTENTS UNLIMITED
PCTINCREASE 0
BUFFER_POOL DEFAULT
)
NOPARALLEL;
CREATE INDEX SCHEMA.STATUS_IDX ON SCHEMA.TEMP_DATA
(STATUS)
LOGGING
TABLESPACE ITS_DATASPACE
PCTFREE 10
INITRANS 2
MAXTRANS 255
STORAGE (
INITIAL 64K
NEXT 1M
MINEXTENTS 1
MAXEXTENTS UNLIMITED
PCTINCREASE 0
BUFFER_POOL DEFAULT
)
NOPARALLEL;
When you create a materialized view, Oracle Database creates one internal table and at least one index, and may create one view, all in the schema of the materialized view. Oracle Database uses these objects to maintain the materialized view data.
So having the table and materialized view with the same name is normal. The MV needs to store the data somewhere, so having a table makes sense; the MV itself then defines how the table data is maintained.
You can use the ON PREBUILT TABLE
clause to create a view over an existing table, which I assume is what "they had a temp table earlier ... and switched to Materialized view later" refers to.
You can also go the other way, with the DROP MATERIALIZED VIEW ... PRESERVE TABLE
option, which leaves the underlying table behind.
When you SELECT * FROM TEMP_DATA;
you're querying the underlying table, but the distinction isn't really important as they refer to the same combined object.
Based on the definition to added to the question later, it will refresh every day at midnight.