You can use the Teradata Table Editor to create new tables (entities) and to modify properties on existing tables in a Teradata physical model.
To define Teradata tables
The Teradata Table Editor opens.
Note: Click New on the toolbar to create a new table. Use the Enter filter text text box to filter a very large list of tables to quickly locate the one you want to work with.
Specifies the physical name of the table. Change the physical name of the table in this field.
Specifies the database or user to which the table belongs. Select the schema from the drop-down list.
Specifies the type of the entity. Select from the drop-down list. Valid values are: Permanent, Global Temporary, Global Temporary Trace, or Queue Table.
Lets you specify whether the table should be suppressed from a logical model and appear in a physical model only.
Generates DDL for this object during Forward Engineering.
Defines the level of integrity checking for disk I/O. Select from the drop-down list. Valid values are: All, Default, Low, Medium, High, and None.
Specifies the data block size type. Select from the drop-down list. Valid values are: Minimum, Maximum, or Specified.
Specifies the data block size. Data can include Bytes or Kilobytes designation following the value.
Specifies the type of fallback protection for the database. Select from the drop-down.
Specifies the amount of free space.
Specifies whether logging of changes to the data occurs.
Specifies if duplicate rows are allowed in the table. Select from the drop-down list. Valid values are: Set or Multiset.
Specifies what happens to the data in a temporary or volatile table when the transaction completes. Select from the drop-down list. Valid values are: Delete or Preserve.
Specifies the name of the replication group to which the selected table is to be added. Select a replication group from the drop-down list or click New to open the Teradata Replication Group Editor.
Specifies that the table has no primary index.
The Teradata Table Editor closes.
You can use the Data Movement Rule tab to specify or view data movement rules on a table in a Teradata physical model.
Note: This tab displays only if the Data Movement option is selected for the model. To set the Data Movement option, right-click the Model on the Model Explorer, select Properties. Click the General tab and select the Data Movement check box under Modeling Features.
You can also use the Data Movement tab in the Teradata Table Editor to create a new data movement rule and apply it to a table.
To define a data movement rule for a Teradata table
The Teradata Table Editor opens.
The Data Movement Rule tab opens.
You can also click New to create new data movement rules using the Data Movement Rule editor.
The Teradata Table Editor closes.
Copyright © 2012 CA. All rights reserved. | Tell Technical Publications how we can improve this information |