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76

answers:

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What is the relationship between ACID and database transaction?

Does ACID give database transaction or is it the same thing?

Could someone enlighten this topic.

+2  A: 

To quote Wikipedia:

ACID (atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability) is a set of properties that guarantee database transactions are processed reliably.

A DBMS that supports transactions will strive to support all of these properties - any commercial DBMS (as well as several open-source DBMSs) provide full ACID 'support' - although it's often possible (for example, with varying isolation levels in MSSQL) to lessen the ACIDness - thus losing the guarantee of fully transactional behaviour.

Will A
+2  A: 

ACID is a set of properties that you would like to apply when modifying a database.

  • Atomicity
  • Consistency
  • Isolation
  • Durability

A transaction is a set of related changes which is used to achieve some of the ACID properties. Transactions are tools to achieve the ACID properties.

Atomicity means that you can guarantee that all of a transaction happens, or none of it does; you can do complex operations as one single unit, all or nothing, and a crash, power failure, error, or anything else won't allow you to be in a state in which only some of the related changes have happened.

Consistency means that you guarantee that your data will be consistent; none of the constraints you have on related data will ever be violated.

Isolation means that one transaction cannot read data from another transaction that is not yet completed. If two transactions are executing concurrently, each one will see the world as if they were executing sequentially, and if one needs to read data that is written by another, it will have to wait until the other is finished.

Durability means that once a transaction is complete, it is guaranteed that all of the changes have been recorded to a durable medium (such as a hard disk), and the fact that the transaction has been completed is likewise recorded.

So, transactions are a mechanism for guaranteeing these properties; they are a way of grouping related actions together such that as a whole, a group of operations can be atomic, produce consistent results, be isolated from other operations, and be durably recorded.

Brian Campbell
+1  A: 

ACID are desirable properties of any transaction processing engine.

A DBMS is (if it is any good) a particular kind of transaction processing engine that exposes, usually to a very large extent but not quite entirely, those properties.

But other engines exist that can also expose those properties. The kind of software that used to be called "TP monitors" being a case in point (nowadays' equivalent mostly being web servers).

Such TP monitors can access resources other than a DBMS (e.g. a printer), and still guarantee ACID toward their users. As an example of what ACID might mean when a printer is involved in a transaction:

  • Atomicity: an entire document gets printed or nothing at all
  • Consistency: at end-of-transaction, the paper feed is positioned at top-of-page
  • Isolation: no two documents get mixed up while printing
  • Durability: the printer can guarantee that it was not "printing" with empty cartridges.
Erwin Smout