1 / 46

Event-Condition-Action Rule Languages over Semistructured Data

Event-Condition-Action Rule Languages over Semistructured Data. George Papamarkos. Outline. What Event-Condition-Action (ECA) Rules are and what we can do with them? ECA Rules for XML ECA Langugage System Architecture Performance ECA Rules for RDF ECA Langugage System Architecture

lterrence
Download Presentation

Event-Condition-Action Rule Languages over Semistructured Data

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Event-Condition-Action Rule Languages over Semistructured Data George Papamarkos

  2. Outline • What Event-Condition-Action (ECA) Rules are and what we can do with them? • ECA Rules for XML • ECA Langugage • System Architecture • Performance • ECA Rules for RDF • ECA Langugage • System Architecture • Performance

  3. What is an ECA Rule? • An Event-Condition-Action rule performs actions in response to events, given that a stated condition holds • An event in a database system can be the insertion of a new tuple • The condition can be a query • The action may be a relational table update • This behaviour is called reactive functionality

  4. What is an ECA Rule? • An ECA rule has the general syntax: on event if condition do action • The event part specifies when the rule is triggered • The condition part determines if the data are in a particular state, in which case the rule fires • The action part describes the actions to be performed if the rule fires.

  5. Advantages of using ECA Rules • Allow applications reactive functionality to be defined and managed within a single rule base rather than being encoded in the programs • Use of a high-level declarative syntax and are thus amenable to analysis and optimisation techniques that cannot be applied if the functionality was encoded in the programming code

  6. Outline • What Event-Condition-Action (ECA) Rules are and what we can do with them? • ECA Rules for XML • ECA Language • System Architecture • Performance • ECA Rules for RDF • ECA Langugage • System Architecture • Performance

  7. ECA Rules for XML - Outline • Design issues of an ECA language for XML • The XTL Language • Implementing an XTL rules processing system • Performance Study

  8. Design issues of an ECA language for XML • Comparing with relational triggers the following are the most important XML-specific issues on designing an ECA language for XML • Event Granularity: Specifying the granularity of where data has be modified is more complex and requires path expressions • Action Granularity: Action may affect an entire sub-document meaning that: • An action can trigger a different set of events • The analysis of which events are triggered by an action cannot be based on syntax alone

  9. The XTL Language • The general syntax of XTL rules is: on event if condition do action • Fragments of XPath and XQuery are used to specify the event, condition and action parts of XTL rules. • XPath is used for selecting and matching fragments of XML • XQuery is used withing actions where it is needed to construct a new XML fragment

  10. The XTL Language • Event Part • Syntax: (INSERT | DELETE) e where e is an XPath expression evaluating to a set of nodes. • A rule is triggered if this set of nodes includes any node in the XML fragment inserted or deleted • The system-defined variable $delta contains this set of nodes and is available for use in condition and action part of the rule

  11. The XTL Language • Condition Part • The condition part is either the constant TRUE or one or more XPath expressions connected by the boolean connectives and, or, not. • Each of these expressions is evaluated on the data to tell whether the condition is TRUE or FALSE

  12. The XTL Language • Action Part: • The action part is a sequece of one or more actions • Syntax: • INSERT r BELOW e (BEFORE | AFTER) q r is an XQuery expression specifying the XML fragment to be inserted, e is an XPath expression specifying the set of nodes under which the new fragment will be inserted, q is either a constant or an XPath qualifier specifying the set of nodes BEFORE or AFTER which the new nodes will be placed. • DELETE e e is an XPath expression specifing the set of nodes to be deleted.

  13. XTL Language • Example rule: ON INSERT doc(‘s.xml’)/shares/share/day-info/prices/price IF $delta > $delta/../../high DO DELETE $delta/../high; INSERT <high>$delta/text()</high> BELOW $delta/../.. AFTER prices

  14. XTL rule processing system

  15. XTL rule processing system - Architecture • ECA Rules Management: Validates and registers a rule to the Rule Base • ECA Rule Processing Engine: • Evaluates the Event and Condition Parts of the rules and schedules their actions for execution in the Action Schedule

  16. System Performance • The system performance was studied by: • Developing an analytical model of the system • Performing experiments in the actual system • We have studied the effects of rule base indexes in system performance • Performance criterion: • Update response time: The mean time taken to complete all rule execution resulting from a single update submitted by a top-level update transaction

  17. System Performance • Varying quantities: • Number of rules in the rule base • Experiments on the actual performed with three (3) different rule sets • XML data set: a fragment of DBLP database

  18. System Performance - Analytical Model • The analytical model is a mathematical description of the system behaviour • Uses queue theory to simulate the transaction queues and database processing • Uses a set of simplifying assumptions to emulate the behaviour of some system parameters (e.g. triggering probability, transaction arrival rate etc.)

  19. System Performance - Analytical Model Results

  20. System Performance - Analytical Model • Response time increases non-linearly for as long as the system is stable (I.e. arrival rate in the transaction queue is less that the service rate) • After the stability point the transaction queue grows uncontrollably large, flooding the memory and slowing it down • Reasons: • Everything served by a single queue • High number of event query evaluations to find what is triggered

  21. System Performance - Experimental Results

  22. System Performance - Experimental Results • Difference with Analytical Model due to: • implementation choices (use of DOM etc.) and • the simplification assumptions made in the analytical model

  23. System Performance

  24. System Performance - Indexing Rule Base

  25. System Performance - Indexing Rule Base • Better overall behaviour and scalability characteristics due to smaller number of rules that need to be checked for triggering • Smaller number of rules checked --> smaller number of queries need to be evaluated

  26. Outline • What Event-Condition-Action (ECA) Rules are and what we can do with them? • ECA Rules for XML • ECA Langugage • System Architecture • Performance • ECA Rules for RDF • ECA • Performance Langugage • System Architecture

  27. ECA Rules for RDF • The RDFTL ECA Language • Implementing RDFTL processing system in P2P environments • System performance

  28. The RDFTL Language • We have designed the language from scratch specifically for RDF • General Syntax: • ON event IF condition DO action

  29. The RDFTL Language • Event Part: • May contain let expressions of the form: LET $var := e • (INSERT | DELETE) e e is a path expression that evaluates on a set of RDF nodes. Catches the insertion or deletion of a node • (INSERT | DELETE) triple triple is an expression of the form (source,arc, target) specifying an RDF triple. Catches the insertion or deletion of a property in an RDF triple. • UPDATE upd_triple upd_triple is an expression of the form (source, arc, old_target->new_target). Catches the update of a property from one RDF node to another.

  30. The RDFTL Language • Condition Part: • It is a boolean-valued expression • May consist of conjunctions, disjunctions and negations • May also contain let expressions • The $delta variable bound to the set of nodes or arcs modified and caught by the event part • Action Part: • A sequence of actions • Each action has similar syntax with the event part

  31. RDFTL Rules in P2P EnvironmentsSystem Architecture

  32. RDFTL Rules in P2P Environments • Each peer (P) is supervised by a superpeer (SP) • The set of Ps supervised by an SP form a peergroup • At each SP there is an RDFTL processing engine installed • Each P or SP hosts a fragment of the RDF schema that may change due to updates • Hybrid fragmentation with possible replication

  33. RDFTL Rules in P2P Environments • Ps notify the SPs for any updates on their local data • An ECA rule generated at one P or SP may be replicated, triggered, evaluated or executed in different sites in the net.

  34. Distributed Rule Registration • A rule generated is sent from P to SP for validation and storage • From there it is sent to all other SPs • A replica of it will be stored also to those SPs that are e-relevant to the rule. I.e. the event part queries of a rule can be evaluated on SP • At each SP each rule is annotated with IDs of local peers that are e-, c- and a-relevant to the rule • c- and a- relevance have a similar meaning with e-relevance for the condition and action part

  35. Distributed Rule Execution • Each SP manages its own rule execution schedule • Each execution schedule is a sequence of updates to be executed on the local peergroup • Once an update u occurs in P, SP is notified • SP determines if u may trigger any rule whose event part is annotated with P’s ID. • If yes, the event query is sent to P for evaluation • If the rule is triggered, its condition will be evaluated • If the condition is true SP will send each instance of r’s action part to local peers that are a-relevant to it

  36. System Performance • The system performance was studied by: • Developing an analytical model of the system • Developing a system simulator and performing experiments with it • Performance criterion: • Update response time: The mean time taken to complete all rule execution resulting from a single update submitted by a top-level update transaction

  37. System Performance • Cases studied with both the Analytical Model and the Simulator : • Random Network topology between SPs, with various data replication degree • HyperCup Network topology between SPs, with various data replication degree • Varying quantities: • Number of peergroups • Number of rules

  38. System Performance Random topology - Replication 10% Analytical Model Simulation

  39. System Performance • With random topology system does not scale well even with low replication and number of rules and peergroups • Exponential update response time • System becomes unusable due to high load

  40. System Performance • HyperCup organises the SPs into hypercubes • HyperCup topology guarantees that: • Each peer receives a message only once • A total number of N-1 hops is necessary to broadcast a message to N peers • The more distant peers are reached after log2N hops

  41. System Performance HyperCup - Replication 10% Analytical Model Simulation

  42. System Performance HyperCup - Replication 90% Analytical Model Simulation

  43. System Performance • With HyperCup we achieve higher performance for various replication levels and number of peergroups • System scales better • System remains stable and the update response time within acceptable values • Analytical with simulation approach show good agreement

  44. Conclusions • We have described two ECA languages for XML and RDF • We have studied and defined the architectural characteristics for an ECA rule processing system in centralised and distributed environment • We have conducted a study to determine the system performance in both the centralised and distributed case

  45. Conclusions • The whole study shows that ECA rules is a usable technology for various different application environments over semi-structured data

  46. Thank you !!

More Related