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XML Views

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(treating it as if it were the relation it returns) SQL: CREATE VIEW V(A,B,C) AS ... If tuples change in the view, that should reflect in the base relation(s) 7 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: XML Views


1
XML Views Reasoning about Views
  • Zachary G. Ives
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • CIS 550 Database Information Systems
  • November 5, 2007

Some slide content courtesy of Susan Davidson,
Dan Suciu, Raghu Ramakrishnan
2
Views Alternate Representations
  • XSLT is a language primarily designed from going
    from XML ? non-XML
  • Obviously, we can do XML ? XML in XQuery
  • Or relations ? relations
  • What about relations ? XML and XML ? relations?
  • Lets start with XML ? XML, relations ? relations

3
Views in SQL and XQuery
  • A view is a named query
  • We use the name of the view to invoke the query
    (treating it as if it were the relation it
    returns)
  • SQL
  • CREATE VIEW V(A,B,C) AS
  • SELECT A,B,C FROM R WHERE R.A 123
  • XQuerydeclare function V() as element(content)
  • for r in doc(R)/root/tree,
  • a in r/a, b in r/b, c in r/c
  • where a 123
  • return ltcontentgta, b, clt/contentgt

Using the views
SELECT FROM V, RWHERE V.B 5 AND V.C R.C
for v in V()/content, r in doc(r)/root/tree
where v/b r/breturn v
4
Whats Useful about Views
  • Providing security/access control
  • We can assign users permissions on different
    views
  • Can select or project so we only reveal what we
    want!
  • Can be used as relations in other queries
  • Allows the user to query things that make more
    sense
  • Describe transformations from one schema (the
    base relations) to another (the output of the
    view)
  • The basis of converting from XML to relations or
    vice versa
  • This will be incredibly useful in data
    integration, discussed soon
  • Allow us to define recursive queries

5
Materialized vs. Virtual Views
  • A virtual view is a named query that is actually
    re-computed every time it is merged with the
    referencing query
  • CREATE VIEW V(A,B,C) AS
  • SELECT A,B,C FROM R WHERE R.A 123
  • A materialized view is one that is computed once
    and its results are stored as a table
  • Think of this as a cached answer
  • These are incredibly useful!
  • Techniques exist for using materialized views to
    answer other queries
  • Materialized views are the basis of relating
    tables in different schemas

SELECT FROM V, RWHERE V.B 5 AND V.C R.C
6
Views Should Stay Fresh
  • Views (sometimes called intensional relations)
    behave, from the perspective of a query language,
    exactly like base relations (extensional
    relations)
  • But theres an association that should be
    maintained
  • If tuples change in the base relation, they
    should change in the view (whether its
    materialized or not)
  • If tuples change in the view, that should reflect
    in the base relation(s)

7
Views as a Bridge between Data Models
  • A claim weve made several times
  • XML cant represent anything that cant be
    expressed in in the relational model
  • If this is true, then we must be able to
    represent XML in relations
  • Store a relational view of XML (or create an XML
    view of relations)

8
A View as a Translation betweenXML and Relations
  • You have the most-cited paper in this area
    (Shanmugasundaram et al), and there are many more
    (Fernandez et al., )
  • Techniques already making it into commercial
    systems
  • XPERANTO at IBM Research, soon to be DB2 v9
  • SQL Server 2005 will have XQuery support Oracle
    will also shortly have XQuery support
  • Now youll know how it works!

9
Issues in Mapping Relational ? XML
  • We know the following
  • XML is a tree
  • XML is SEMI-structured
  • Theres some structured stuff
  • There is some unstructured stuff
  • Issues relate to describing XML structure,
    particularly parent/child in a relational
    encoding
  • Relations are flat
  • Tuples can be connected via foreign-key/primary-
    key links

10
The Simplest Way to Encode a Tree
  • Suppose we hadlttree id0gt ltcontent id1gt
    ltsub-contentgtXYZ lt/sub-contentgt
    lti-contentgt14 lt/i-contentgt
    lt/contentgtlt/treegt
  • If we have no IDs, we CREATE values
  • BinaryLikeEdge(key, label, type, value, parent)

key label type value parent
0 tree ref - -
1 content ref - 0
2 sub-content ref - 1
3 i-content ref - 1
4 - str XYZ 2
5 - int 14 3
What are shortcomings here?
11
Florescu/Kossmann Improved Edge Approach
  • Consider order, typing separate the values
  • Vint(vid, value)
  • Vstring(vid, value)
  • Edge(parent, ordinal, label, flag, target)

vid value
v3 14
parent ord label flag target
- 1 tree ref 0
0 1 content ref 1
1 1 sub-content str v2
1 1 i-content int v3
vid value
v2 XYZ
12
How Do You Compute the XML?
  • Assume we know the structure of the XML tree
    (well see how to avoid this later)
  • We can compute an XML-like SQL relation using
    outer unions we first this technique in
    XPERANTO
  • Idea if we take two non-union-compatible
    expressions, pad each with NULLs, we can UNION
    them together
  • Lets see how this works

13
A Relation that Mirrors theXML Hierarchy
  • Output relation would look like

rLabel rid rOrd clabel cid cOrd sLabel sid sOrd str int
tree 0 1 - - - - - - - -
- 0 1 content 1 1 - - - - -
- 0 1 - 1 1 sub-content 2 1 - -
- 0 1 - 1 1 - 2 1 XYZ -
- 0 1 - 1 2 i-content 3 1 - -
- 0 1 - 1 2 - 3 1 - 14
14
A Relation that Mirrors theXML Hierarchy
  • Output relation would look like

rLabel rid rOrd clabel cid cOrd sLabel sid sOrd str int
tree 0 1 - - - - - - - -
- 0 1 content 1 1 - - - - -
- 0 1 - 1 1 sub-content 2 1 - -
- 0 1 - 1 1 - 2 1 XYZ -
- 0 1 - 1 2 i-content 3 1 - -
- 0 1 - 1 2 - 3 1 - 14
15
A Relation that Mirrors theXML Hierarchy
  • Output relation would look like

rLabel rid rOrd clabel cid cOrd sLabel sid sOrd str int
tree 0 1 - - - - - - - -
- 0 1 content 1 1 - - - - -
- 0 1 - 1 1 sub-content 2 1 - -
- 0 1 - 1 1 - 2 1 XYZ -
- 0 1 - 1 2 i-content 3 1 - -
- 0 1 - 1 2 - 3 1 - 14
Colors are representative of separate SQL queries
16
SQL for Outputting XML
  • For each sub-portion we preserve the keys
    (target, ord) of the ancestors
  • Root
  • select E.label AS rLabel, E.target AS rid, E.ord
    AS rOrd, null AS cLabel, null AS cid, null AS
    cOrd, null AS subOrd, null AS sid, null AS str,
    null AS intfrom Edge Ewhere parent IS NULL
  • First-level children
  • select null AS rLabel, E.target AS rid, E.ord AS
    rOrd, E1.label AS cLabel, E1.target AS cid,
    E1.ord AS cOrd, null AS from Edge E, Edge
    E1where E.parent IS NULL AND E.target E1.parent

17
The Rest of the Queries
  • Grandchild
  • select null as rLabel, E.target AS rid, E.ord AS
    rOrd, null AS cLabel, E1.target AS cid, E1.ord AS
    cOrd, E2.label as sLabel, E2.target as sid,
    E2.ord AS sOrd, null as from Edge E, Edge E1,
    Edge E2where E.parent IS NULL AND E.target
    E1.parent AND E1.target E2.parent
  • Strings
  • select null as rLabel, E.target AS rid, E.ord AS
    rOrd, null AS cLabel, E1.target AS cid, E1.ord AS
    cOrd, null as sLabel, E2.target as sid, E2.ord AS
    sOrd, Vi.val AS str, null as intfrom Edge E,
    Edge E1, Edge E2, Vint Vi where E.parent IS NULL
    AND E.target E1.parent AND E1.target
    E2.parent AND Vi.vid E2.target
  • How would we do integers?

18
Finally
  • Union them all together
  • ( select E.label as rLabel, E.target AS rid,
    E.ord AS rOrd, from Edge E where parent IS
    NULL)UNION ( select null as rLabel, E.target
    AS rid, E.ord AS rOrd, E1.label AS cLabel,
    E1.target AS cid, E1.ord AS cOrd, null as
    from Edge E, Edge E1 where E.parent IS NULL AND
    E.target E1.parent) UNION (
  • .
  • ) UNION ( .
  • )
  • Then another module will add the XML tags, and
    were done!

19
Inlining Techniques
  • Folks at Wisconsin noted we can exploit the
    structured aspects of semi-structured XML
  • If were given a DTD, often the DTD has a lot of
    required (and often singleton) child elements
  • Book(title, author, publisher)
  • Recall how normalization worked
  • Decompose until we have everything in a relation
    determined by the keys
  • But dont decompose any further than that
  • Shanmugasundaram et al. try not to decompose XML
    beyond the point of singleton children

20
Inlining Techniques
  • Start with DTD, build a graph representing
    structure

tree
?
_at_id

content
_at_id


i-content
sub-content
  • The edges are annotated with ?, indicating
    repetition,optionality of children
  • They simplify the DTD to figure this out

21
Building Schemas
  • Now, they tried several alternatives that differ
    in how they handle elements w/multiple ancestors
  • Can create a separate relation for each path
  • Can create a single relation for each element
  • Can try to inline these
  • For tree examples, these are basically the same
  • Combine non-set-valued things with parent
  • Add separate relation for set-valued child
    elements
  • Create new keys as needed

author
book
name
22
Schemas for Our Example
  • TheRoot(rootID)
  • Content(parentID, id, _at_id)
  • Sub-content(parentID, varchar)
  • I-content(parentID, int)
  • If we suddenly changed DTD to lt!ELEMENT
    content(sub-content, i-content?) what would
    happen?

23
XQuery to SQL
  • Inlining method needs external knowledge about
    the schema
  • Needs to supply the tags and info not stored in
    the tables
  • We can actually directly translate simple XQuery
    into SQL over the relations not simply
    reconstruct the XML

24
An Example
  • for X in document(mydoc)/tree/contentwhere
    X/sub-content XYZreturn X
  • The steps of the path expression are generally
    joins
  • Except that some steps are eliminated by the
    fact weve inlined subelements
  • Lets try it over the schema
  • TheRoot(rootID)
  • Content(parentID, id, _at_id)
  • Sub-content(parentID, varchar)
  • I-content(parentID, int)

25
XML Views of Relations
  • Weve seen that views are useful things
  • Allow us to store and refer to the results of a
    query
  • Weve seen an example of a view that changes from
    XML to relations and weve even seen how such a
    view can be posed in XQuery and unfolded into
    SQL

26
An Important Set of Questions
  • Views are incredibly powerful formalisms for
    describing how data relates fn rel ? ? rel ?
    rel
  • Can I define a view recursively?
  • Why might this be useful? When should the
    recursion stop?
  • Suppose we have two views, v1 and v2
  • How do I know whether they represent the same
    data?
  • If v1 is materialized, can we use it to compute
    v2?
  • This is fundamental to query optimization and
    data integration, as well see later

27
Reasoning about Queries and Views
  • SQL or XQuery are a bit too complex to reason
    about directly
  • Some aspects of it make reasoning about SQL
    queries undecidable
  • We need an elegant way of describing views (lets
    assume a relational model for now)
  • Should be declarative
  • Should be less complex than SQL
  • Doesnt need to support all of SQL aggregation,
    for instance, may be more than we need

28
Lets Go Back a Few WeeksDomain Relational
Calculus
  • Queries have form
  • ltx1,x2, , xngt p
  • Predicate boolean expression over x1,x2, , xn
  • We have the following operations
  • ltxi,xj,gt ? R xi op xj xi op const const op xi
  • ?xi. p ?xj. p p?q, p?q ?p, p?q
  • where op is ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ? and
  • xi,xj, are domain variables p,q are predicates
  • Recall that this captures the same expressiveness
    as the relational algebra

domain variables
predicate
29
A Similar Logic-Based LanguageDatalog
  • Borrows the flavor of the relational calculus but
    is a real query language
  • Based on the Prolog logic-programming language
  • A datalog program will be a series of if-then
    rules (Horn rules) that define relations from
    predicates
  • Rules are generally of the form
  • Rout(T1) ? R1(T2), R2(T3), , c(T2 Tn)
  • where Rout is the relation representing the
    query result, Ri are predicates representing
    relations, c is an expression using
    arithmetic/boolean predicates over vars, and
    Ti are tuples of variables

30
Datalog Terminology
  • An example datalog rule
  • idb(x,y) ? r1(x,z), r2(z,y), z lt 10
  • Irrelevant variables can be replaced by _
    (anonymous var)
  • Extensional relations or database schemas (edbs)
    are relations only occurring in rules bodies
    these are base relations with ground facts
  • Intensional relations (idbs) appear in the heads
    these are basically views
  • Distinguished variables are the ones output in
    the head
  • Ground facts only have constants, e.g., r1(abc,
    123)

body
head
subgoals
31
Datalog in Action
  • As in DRC, the output (head) consists of a tuple
    for each possible assignment of variables that
    satisfies the predicate
  • We typically avoid 8 in Datalog queries
    variables in the body are existential, ranging
    over all possible values
  • Multiple rules with the same relation in the head
    represent a union
  • We often try to avoid disjunction (Ç) within
    rules
  • Lets see some examples of datalog queries
    (which consist of 1 or more rules)
  • Given Professor(fid, name), Teaches(fid, serno,
    sem), Courses(serno, cid, desc), Student(sid,
    name)
  • Return course names other than CIS 550
  • Return the names of the teachers of CIS 550
  • Return the names of all people (professors or
    students)

32
Datalog is Relationally Complete
  • We can map RA ? Datalog
  • Selection ?p p becomes a datalog subgoal
  • Projection ?A we drop projected-out variables
    from head
  • Cross-product r ? s q(A,B,C,D) ? r(A,B),s(C,D)
  • Join r ? s q(A,B,C,D) ? r(A,B),s(C,D),
    condition
  • Union r U s q(A,B) ? r(A,B) q(C, D) - s(C,D)
  • Difference r s q(A,B) ? r(A,B), s(A,B)
  • (If you think about it, DRC ? Datalog is even
    easier)
  • Great But then why do we care about Datalog?
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