Oracle metadata


provides information about all of the tables, views, columns, and procedures in a database. This information about the information is known as metadata. It is stored in two locations: data dictionary tables and a metadata registry.
Other relational database management systems support an ANSI-standard equivalent called information schema.

Views for metadata

The total number of these views depends on the Oracle version, but is in a 1000 range.
The main built-in views accessing Oracle RDBMS data dictionary tables are few, and are as follows:
In addition there are equivalent views prefixed "USER_" which show only the objects owned by the current user and prefixed "DBA_" which show all objects in the database. Naturally the access to "DBA_" metadata views requires specific privileges.

Example 1: finding tables

Find all Tables that have PATTERN in the table name

SELECT Owner AS Schema_Name, Table_Name
FROM All_Tables
WHERE Table_Name LIKE '%PATTERN%'
ORDER BY Owner, Table_Name;

Example 2: finding columns

Find all tables that have at least one column that matches a specific PATTERN in the column name

SELECT Owner AS Schema_Name, Table_Name, Column_Name
FROM All_Tab_Columns
WHERE Column_Name LIKE '%PATTERN%'
ORDER BY 1,2,3;

Example 3: counting rows of columns

Estimate a total number of rows in all tables containing a column name that matches PATTERN

COLUMN DUMMY NOPRINT
COMPUTE SUM OF NUM_ROWS ON DUMMY
BREAK ON DUMMY
SELECT
NULL DUMMY,
T.TABLE_NAME,
C.COLUMN_NAME,
T.NUM_ROWS
FROM
ALL_TABLES T,
ALL_TAB_COLUMNS C
WHERE
T.TABLE_NAME = C.TABLE_NAME
AND C.COLUMN_NAME LIKE '%PATTERN%'
AND T.OWNER = C.OWNER
ORDER BY T.TABLE_NAME;

Note that NUM_ROWS records the number of rows which were in a table when it was last analyzed. This will most likely deviate from the actual number of rows currently in the table.

Example 4: finding view columns

Find view columns

SELECT TABLE_NAME,
column_name,
decode',
'NUMBER',
DECODE),
c.DATA_TYPE) data_type
FROM cols c, obj o
WHERE c.TABLE_NAME = o.object_name
AND o.object_type = 'VIEW'
AND c.table_name LIKE '%PATTERN%'
ORDER BY c.table_name, c.column_id;

Warning: This is incomplete with respect to multiple datatypes including char, varchar and timestamp and uses extremely old, deprecated dictionary views, back to oracle 5.

Use of underscore in table and column names

The underscore is a special SQL pattern match to a single character and should be escaped if you are in fact looking for an underscore character in the LIKE clause of a query.
Just add the following after a LIKE statement:
ESCAPE '_'
And then each literal underscore should be a double underscore: __
Example
LIKE '%__G' ESCAPE '_'

Oracle Metadata Registry

The Oracle product Oracle Enterprise Metadata Manager is an ISO/IEC 11179 compatible metadata registry. It stores administered metadata in a consistent format that can be used for metadata publishing. In January 2006, EMM was available only through Oracle consulting services.