- From: Souripriya Das <SOURIPRIYA.DAS@oracle.com>
- Date: Fri, 4 May 2012 06:32:29 -0700 (PDT)
- To: <ivan@w3.org>
- Cc: <ashok.malhotra@oracle.com>, <public-rdb2rdf-wg@w3.org>, <juanfederico@gmail.com>, <richard@cyganiak.de>, <michael.hausenblas@deri.org>, <eric@w3.org>
Since some commercial DBs allow NULL unique key, please consider replacing "tables which have at least one unique key" with "tables which have at least one non-NULL unique key" Thanks, - Souri. ----- Original Message ----- From: ivan@w3.org To: juanfederico@gmail.com Cc: eric@w3.org, richard@cyganiak.de, ashok.malhotra@oracle.com, michael.hausenblas@deri.org, public-rdb2rdf-wg@w3.org Sent: Friday, May 4, 2012 9:22:32 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern Subject: Re: Brain teaser for non-PK tables On May 4, 2012, at 15:18 , Juan Sequeda wrote: > This means that we would leave the DM as-is, right? On the technical side, yes. These changes are clarifications/editorial. Ivan > > > Juan Sequeda > +1-575-SEQ-UEDA > www.juansequeda.com > > > On Fri, May 4, 2012 at 8:15 AM, Eric Prud'hommeaux <eric@w3.org> wrote: > * Juan Sequeda <juanfederico@gmail.com> [2012-05-04 08:10-0500] > > On Fri, May 4, 2012 at 8:05 AM, Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org> wrote: > > > > > Eric, > > > > > > this seems to be a bit drastic for my taste; I would not want to burn the > > > bridges between the R2RML and the DM. The fact that these two are closely > > > related, that, *in general*, the DM is a default case for R2RML is, I > > > believe, a strong feature, a good 'story'. I would not want to loose that. > > > > > > However, we have to face that there *are* cases when things do not really > > > fit. What about modifying the two documents as follows (note that point #2 > > > is not strictly necessary for the discussion at hand, but it makes the > > > relationships even clearer and stronger): > > > > > > 1. In the DM, instead of "is intended to provide a default behavior for > > > R2RML: RDB to RDF Mapping Language" say "is intended to provide a default > > > behavior for R2RML: RDB to RDF Mapping Language for tables which have at > > > least one unique key" > > > > > > > +1 > > +1 > > > > 2. Add to the R2RML document (probably in the intro part): "R2RML > > > implementations are encouraged to provide a default mapping equivalent to > > > the Direct Mapping for tables which have at least one unique key" > > > > > > > +1 > > +1 > > > > 3. Add a Note to R2RML 6.1: "Because rr:IRI and rr:BlankNode subject > > > labels are generated from column values, R2RML mappings do not preserve > > > repeated rows in SQL databases." > > > > > > > +1 > > +1 > > > > How does that sound? > > > > > > Ivan > > > > > > On May 4, 2012, at 13:43 , Eric Prud'hommeaux wrote: > > > > > > > * Juan Sequeda <juanfederico@gmail.com> [2012-05-03 20:04-0500] > > > >> All, > > > >> > > > >> 1) Technically we could (and maybe should) add this to the standard > > > (both > > > >> DM and R2RML) however... > > > >> 2) We just realized about the problem now and somebody (Eric/Richard) > > > came > > > >> up with A solution. The rest of the standard has been built on years of > > > >> experience. If this problem came up now just now, at the last minute, it > > > >> means that nobody cared much about this before. That doesn't mean that > > > they > > > >> won't want it now. But it does mean that we should look into it with > > > more > > > >> detail, given that we know the issue exists. Down the road, we will > > > know if > > > >> it is feasible, etc > > > > > > > > We could move along more quickly if we: > > > > > > > > 1. strike "is intended to provide a default behavior for R2RML: RDB > > > > to RDF Mapping Language" from DM > > > > > > > > 2. add a Note to R2RML 6.1: "Because rr:IRI and rr:BlankNode subject > > > > labels are generated from column values, R2RML mappings do not > > > > preserve repeated rows in SQL databases. > > > > > > > > Adding a per-row blank node identifier in v1.1 will be completely > > > > backward-compatible with v1.0. > > > > > > > > > > > >> Juan Sequeda > > > >> +1-575-SEQ-UEDA > > > >> www.juansequeda.com > > > >> > > > >> > > > >> On Thu, May 3, 2012 at 7:27 PM, Richard Cyganiak <richard@cyganiak.de > > > >wrote: > > > >> > > > >>> Hi Eric, > > > >>> > > > >>> My short response is: The proposal is *optional*. You don't have to > > > >>> implement it. You don't have to use implementations that don't support > > > it. > > > >>> It's just an extra sentence or two in the spec. There is clear guidance > > > >>> which option implementers should support. What harm is there in > > > allowing > > > >>> the option? > > > >>> > > > >>> You offered one argument against providing this optional feature, and > > > >>> that's the point about backwards compatibility. Future WGs may find it > > > >>> difficult to remove this option even if the option becomes obsolete > > > due to > > > >>> a possible R2RML 1.1 update. I'll address this below. > > > >>> > > > >>> On 3 May 2012, at 22:36, Eric Prud'hommeaux wrote: > > > >>>> * ashok malhotra <ashok.malhotra@oracle.com> [2012-05-03 12:22-0700] > > > >>>>> +1 for option 2. Seems less onerous. Eric? > > > >>>> > > > >>>> It pains me that folks see me as obstructionist when I may well be > > > >>>> saving us a 3rd LC. In June of 2006, Fred Zemke spotted a similar > > > >>>> problem in the semantics of SPARQL wich took us six months to fix > > > >>>> <http://www.w3.org/mid/4488B936.10705@oracle.com>. > > > >>> > > > >>> The problem in SPARQL was that it specified that implementations MUST > > > NOT > > > >>> use multiset semantics. > > > >>> > > > >>> The proposal on our table is to RECOMMEND multiset semantics, but state > > > >>> that implementations MAY use set semantics for compatibility. This is > > > not > > > >>> comparable to the SPARQL situation. > > > >>> > > > >>> I also note that the 1st LC period and the CR period have passed > > > without > > > >>> any comments on issues of cardinality. > > > >>> > > > >>>> Speaking with Sam Madden, this seems like less of a corner case than > > > >>>> we originally thought. He and Zemke asserted that while some base > > > >>>> tables may have no uniques, it's more common for views materialized > > > >>>> for performance to preserve only the information required to perform > > > >>>> some aggregates. Before standardization of SQL, some relational DBs > > > >>>> operated on sets, others on multisets, and some (Zemke worked on one > > > >>>> called Britton Lee) preserved repeated rows until one did a > > > >>>> sort. Customers, particularly those using views, had to be very > > > >>>> careful in what order they performed various operations. > > > >>> > > > >>> Well, I can see why customers wouldn't be so happy about this, but it's > > > >>> not quite the same thing here. > > > >>> > > > >>> The order of query operations doesn't matter in the proposed design. > > > >>> SPARQL has multiset semantics, so even if you query a table with > > > discarded > > > >>> duplicates, the query execution is with the usual well-defined SPARQL > > > >>> semantics. It's only in the mapping from non-PK tables to RDF graphs > > > that > > > >>> cardinality is not maintained. > > > >>> > > > >>>> Juan brought up fixing this in v1. It's easy for v1.1 to relax rigid > > > >>>> constraints in v1.0, but most charters promise backward compatibility, > > > >>>> so v1.1 can't impose restrictions not present in v1.0. > > > >>> > > > >>> That all depends on what we write into the spec, doesn't it? The DM > > > spec > > > >>> could state that the permission for discarding duplicate rows may be > > > >>> removed in a future version, provided that a future R2RML adds a way of > > > >>> preserving cardinality on no-PK tables. > > > >>> > > > >>>> Another issue is the performance of very common queries. Under > > > >>>> multiset semantics, any query which either reports the name of an > > > >>>> unnamed row requires the complex dance that Richard and I discussed. > > > >>> > > > >>> Yes, these queries are slow. > > > >>> > > > >>>> OTOH, under set semantics, any query which simply restricts or > > > >>>> projects some row attributes requires a distinct subselect, which is > > > >>>> either memory intensive or requires a sort of the table. > > > >>> > > > >>> Well, you forget about query optimization, see below. > > > >>> > > > >>>> For example, > > > >>>> a simple join to get the addresses of folks with year-old debts: > > > >>>> > > > >>>> SELECT ?name ?city > > > >>>> WHERE { > > > >>>> ?debt <IOUs#name> ?name ; > > > >>>> <IOUs#date> ?date ; > > > >>>> <IOUs#addr> ?addr . > > > >>>> ?addr <Addresses#city> ?city > > > >>>> FILTER (?date < "2011-05-03"^^xsd:date) > > > >>>> } > > > >>>> > > > >>>> multiset SQL translation: > > > >>>> SELECT name, city > > > >>>> FROM IOUs INNER JOIN Addresses ON IOUs.addr=Addresses.ID > > > >>>> WHERE date < "2011-05-03" > > > >>>> > > > >>>> set SQL translation: > > > >>>> SELECT name, city > > > >>>> FROM ( > > > >>>> SELECT DISTINCT name, date, addr, attr4, attr5 > > > >>>> FROM IOUs > > > >>>> ) IOUs INNER JOIN Addresses ON IOUs.addr=Addresses.ID > > > >>>> WHERE date < "2011-05-03" > > > >>> > > > >>> Not having thought about this too hard, the second query doesn't seem > > > >>> particularly bad. Isn't it equivalent to this? > > > >>> > > > >>> SELECT name, city > > > >>> FROM ( > > > >>> SELECT DISTINCT name, date, addr, attr4, attr5 > > > >>> FROM IOUs > > > >>> WHERE date < "2011-05-03" > > > >>> ) IOUs INNER JOIN Addresses ON IOUs.addr=Addresses.ID > > > >>> > > > >>> So the duplicate removal is only necessary over the subset of the table > > > >>> that is actually being returned in the end. The INNER JOIN can also be > > > >>> moved inside the DISTINCT, I think. The DISTINCT should then be O(n > > > log n) > > > >>> where n is the number of result rows, which isn't too bad. > > > >>> > > > >>> IIRC, DISTINCT can be moved up in the algebra tree over most other > > > >>> operations, except for projections (which can usually be done last > > > without > > > >>> much performance impact), aggregates (which require more memory than > > > >>> DISTINCT anyways) and LIMIT (which also limits the memory required for > > > >>> DISTINCT). > > > >>> > > > >>> D2RQ is fairly smart about moving DISTINCTs around before generating > > > the > > > >>> final SQL query. I'd expect that most decent query optimizers are even > > > >>> smarter than what we do. > > > >>> > > > >>>> One could make a pretty good case for preserving the intuitive and > > > >>>> efficient query mapping for such common queries. > > > >>> > > > >>> 1. For many of these common queries, the DISTINCT is done on a reduced > > > >>> intermediate result, or even on the final result set, and not on the > > > input > > > >>> data. So it's not that bad. > > > >>> > > > >>> 2. The strange contortions required for returning subjects may well > > > >>> reverse the argument here. You make unproven assumptions about what > > > queries > > > >>> are common. > > > >>> > > > >>> 3. Again, the proposal is *not* to abandon the cardinality-preserving > > > >>> query mapping. The proposal is to allow another query mapping as well, > > > for > > > >>> compatibility. > > > >>> > > > >>> Best, > > > >>> Richard > > > >>> > > > >>> > > > >>> > > > >>>> > > > >>>> > > > >>>>> All the best, Ashok > > > >>>>> > > > >>>>> On 5/3/2012 12:10 PM, Juan Sequeda wrote: > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> On Thu, May 3, 2012 at 2:01 PM, Richard Cyganiak < > > > richard@cyganiak.de<mailto: > > > >>> richard@cyganiak.de>> wrote: > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> On 3 May 2012, at 17:11, Juan Sequeda wrote: > > > >>>>>>> Do you accept eric's proposal (which hasn't been stated yet): > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> 1) Leave DM as-is > > > >>>>>>> 2) Add the following to R2RML > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> rr:subjectMap [ > > > >>>>>>> rr:termType rr:RowBlankNode > > > >>>>>>> ]; > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> (I'd prefer calling it rr:BlankNode. The absence of > > > >>> rr:column/rr:template/rr:constant indicates the new behaviour.) > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> This is a new feature that was never discussed before. It's not > > > just > > > >>> a tweak. No existing RDB2RDF mapping language has anything comparable. > > > How > > > >>> to sensibly implement it, is a somewhat open question, AFAIK. Had this > > > been > > > >>> proposed a few months ago, everyone would have said, “sounds like an > > > R2RML > > > >>> 1.1 feature” and we would have postponed it without complaints. > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> The problem at hand is the an incompatibility between two specs, > > > >>> let's call them A and B, in a corner case. Now given these choices: > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> 1) Add a new and somewhat risky feature to spec A, at a time when > > > we > > > >>> thought we were just about to enter PR. Send all implementers of A > > > back to > > > >>> the drawing board. Delay the WG for an indefinite amount of time, over > > > a > > > >>> barely relevant corner case. > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> 2) Relax a constraint in spec B to say you SHOULD implement the > > > >>> “correct” behaviour for this corner case, but MAY also implement > > > another > > > >>> not entirely unreasonable behaviour that is compatible with A as it > > > is. Add > > > >>> some alarming language and say: “We expect future versions of A to > > > remove > > > >>> this limitation.” No implementation changes. Go to PR in three weeks. > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> To me, 2) makes a lot more sense than 1). > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> I agree with Richard. Option 2 seems more reasonable at the moment. > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> We already have other issues to address for a R2RML and DM 1.1 > > > >>> version. This could be part of it. I'm not sure how this works in the > > > >>> standardization process, but as a group, we believe this particular > > > issue > > > >>> is a corner case so it's not imperative to include it in the current > > > >>> version of the standard. However, if users complain about this corner > > > case > > > >>> (we then realize that it isn't a corner case), we realize we were wrong > > > >>> from the beginning. I'm guessing this sometimes (usually?) happens in > > > >>> standards, right? > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> Best, > > > >>>>>> Richard > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> Juan Sequeda > > > >>>>>>> +1-575-SEQ-UEDA > > > >>>>>>> www.juansequeda.com <http://www.juansequeda.com> > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> On Thu, May 3, 2012 at 11:08 AM, Michael Hausenblas < > > > >>> michael.hausenblas@deri.org <mailto:michael.hausenblas@deri.org>> > > > wrote: > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>> Were we close to closing R2RML's CR? > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> This was the last issue, all other have been resolved in last weeks > > > >>> meeting (see also my comments when I sent out the minutes [1]). Never > > > mind, > > > >>> we're not extending CR but entering a second, rather short LC period. > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> Ivan, can you prepare a respective PROPOSAL for next week's meeting > > > >>> please? > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> Cheers, > > > >>>>>>> Michael > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> [1] > > > >>> > > > http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-rdb2rdf-wg/2012May/0005.html > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> -- > > > >>>>>>> Dr. Michael Hausenblas, Research Fellow > > > >>>>>>> DERI - Digital Enterprise Research Institute > > > >>>>>>> NUIG - National University of Ireland, Galway > > > >>>>>>> Ireland, Europe > > > >>>>>>> Tel.: +353 91 495730 <tel:%2B353%2091%20495730> > > > >>>>>>> WebID: http://sw-app.org/mic.xhtml#i > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> On 3 May 2012, at 17:04, Eric Prud'hommeaux wrote: > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>> * Juan Sequeda <juanfederico@gmail.com <mailto: > > > >>> juanfederico@gmail.com>> [2012-05-03 10:50-0500] > > > >>>>>>>>> Looks like we have to extend CR till > > > >>>>>>>>> we have implementations for this corner case. > > > >>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>> Were we close to closing R2RML's CR? > > > >>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>> Juan Sequeda > > > >>>>>>>>> www.juansequeda.com <http://www.juansequeda.com> > > > >>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>> On May 3, 2012, at 10:42 AM, Richard Cyganiak < > > > richard@cyganiak.de<mailto: > > > >>> richard@cyganiak.de>> wrote: > > > >>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>>> On 3 May 2012, at 16:25, Eric Prud'hommeaux wrote: > > > >>>>>>>>>>> presumes you can create tables, but yeah, conceptually easier > > > >>> query. > > > >>>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>>> (It looks like most databases have a proprietary method of > > > adding > > > >>> the indexes that doesn't require write access to the DB.) > > > >>>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>>>> you can even push the symbol generation down: > > > >>>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>>> Right. > > > >>>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>>>>> The big remaining question is: How to handle this in R2RML? > > > >>>>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>>>> Looking for an analog to: > > > >>>>>>>>>>> rr:subjectMap [ > > > >>>>>>>>>>> rr:column "ROWID"; > > > >>>>>>>>>>> rr:termType rr:BlankNode > > > >>>>>>>>>>> ]; > > > >>>>>>>>>>> I'd propose: > > > >>>>>>>>>>> rr:subjectMap [ > > > >>>>>>>>>>> rr:termType rr:RowBlankNode > > > >>>>>>>>>>> ]; > > > >>>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>>> That's an option. Even keeping rr:BlankNode would work — the > > > >>> absence of an rr:column/rr:template/rr:constant might signal that a > > > fresh > > > >>> blank node must be allocated for each row. > > > >>>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>>>> Does that complicate things beyond how much a cardinality > > > >>> requirement necessarily complicates things? > > > >>>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>>> Well, the spec only needs to define the graph generated by the > > > >>> mapping, so in terms of specification it would be a simple enough > > > change. > > > >>>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>>> The implications for implementers are quite significant though. > > > >>> It's a new feature, the implementation costs are not trivial, no > > > existing > > > >>> implementation does this (AFAIK), so there's a certain amount of R&D > > > >>> required to show that it's implementable. > > > >>>>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>>>> Best, > > > >>>>>>>>>> Richard > > > >>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>>> -- > > > >>>>>>>> -ericP > > > >>>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>>>> > > > >>>> > > > >>>> -- > > > >>>> -ericP > > > >>>> > > > >>> > > > >>> > > > > > > > > -- > > > > -ericP > > > > > > > > > > > > > ---- > > > Ivan Herman, W3C Semantic Web Activity Lead > > > Home: http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/ > > > mobile: +31-641044153 > > > FOAF: http://www.ivan-herman.net/foaf.rdf > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > -- > -ericP > ---- Ivan Herman, W3C Semantic Web Activity Lead Home: http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/ mobile: +31-641044153 FOAF: http://www.ivan-herman.net/foaf.rdf
Received on Friday, 4 May 2012 13:33:13 UTC