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A query system for XML data stream and its semanticsbased buffer reduction

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posted on 2024-07-11, 07:54 authored by Chi Yang, Chengfei LiuChengfei Liu, Jianxin Li, Jeffrey Xu Yu, Junhu Wang
With respect to current methods for query evaluation over XML data streams, adoption of certain types of buffering techniques is unavoidable. Under lots of circumstances, the buffer scale may increase exponentially, which can cause memory bottleneck. Some optimization techniques have been proposed to solve the problem. However, the limit of these techniques has been defined by a concurrency lower bound and has been theoretically proved. In this paper, we show through an empirical study that this lower bound can be broken by taking semantic information into account for buffer reduction. To demonstrate this, we built a SAX-based XML stream query evaluation system and designed an algorithm that consumes buffers in line with the concurrency lower bound. After a further analysis of the lower bound, we designed several semantic rules for the purpose of breaking the lower bound and incorporated these rules in the lower bound algorithm. Experiments are conducted to show that the algorithms deploying semantic rules individually and collectively all significantly outperform the lower bound algorithm that does not consider semantic information.

Funding

XML Views of Relational Databases: Semantics and Update Problems

Australian Research Council

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PDF (Published version)

ISSN

1443-458X

Journal title

Journal of Research and Practice in Information Technology

Volume

42

Issue

2

Pagination

17 pp

Publisher

Australian Computer Society

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2010 Australian Computer Society Inc. General permission to republish, but not for profit, all or part of this material is granted, provided that the JRPIT copyright notice is given and that reference is made to the publication, to its date of issue, and to the fact that reprinting privileges were granted by permission of the Australian Computer Society Inc.

Language

eng

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