Rollback (data management)In database technologies, a rollback is an operation which returns the database to some previous state. Rollbacks are important for database integrity, because they mean that the database can be restored to a clean copy even after erroneous operations are performed.[1] They are crucial for recovering from database server crashes; by rolling back any transaction which was active at the time of the crash, the database is restored to a consistent state. The rollback feature is usually implemented with a transaction log, but can also be implemented via multiversion concurrency control. Cascading rollbackA cascading rollback occurs in database systems when a transaction (T1) causes a failure and a rollback must be performed. Other transactions dependent on T1's actions must also be rollbacked due to T1's failure, thus causing a cascading effect. That is, one transaction's failure causes many to fail. Practical database recovery techniques guarantee cascadeless rollback, therefore a cascading rollback is not a desirable result. Cascading rollback is scheduled by dba. SQLSQL refers to Structured Query Language, a kind of language used to access, update and manipulate database.
In SQL, A In most SQL dialects, Usage outside databasesRollbacks are not exclusive to databases: any stateful distributed system may use rollback operations to maintain consistency. Examples of distributed systems that can support rollbacks include message queues and workflow management systems. More generally, any operation that resets a system to its previous state before another operation or series of operations can be viewed as a rollback. See alsoNotes
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