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XML and Databases 198:541
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XML Motivation
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Huge amounts of unstructured data on the web: HTML documents No structure information Only format instructions (presentation) Integration of data from different sources Structural differences Closely related to semistructured data
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Semistructured Data Integration of heterogeneous sources Data sources with non rigid structures Biological data Web data Need for more structural information than plain text, but less constraints on structure than in relational data
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Characteristics of Semistructured Data Missing or additional tuples Multiple attributes Different types in different objects Heterogeneous collection Self-describing, irregular data with no apriori structure
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HTML Document Example Bibliography Foundations of Databases Abiteboul, Hull, Vianu Addison Wesley, 1995 Data on the Web Abiteoul, Buneman, Suciu Morgan Kaufmann, 1999 Type of information Title Authors Year book
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The Idea Behind XML Easily support information exchange between applications / computers Reuse what worked in HTML Human readable Standard Easy to generate and read But allow arbitrary markup Uniform language for semistructured data Data Management
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XML
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eXtensible Markup Language Universal standard for documents and data Defined by W3C Set of emerging technologies XLink, XPointer, XSchema, DOM, SAX, XPath, XQuery,…
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XML XML gives a syntax, not a semantic XML defines the structure of a document, not how it is processed Separate structural information from format instructions
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XML Example Foundations… Abiteboul Hull Vianu Addison Wesley 1995 …
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XML Terminology Tags: book, title, author,… Start tag: End Tag: Elements are nested Empty Element => XML Document: single root element XML Document is well formed: matching tags
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XML Attributes Attributes are pairs that characterize an element. Foundations of Databases Abiteboul … 1995 Can define oid, but they are just syntax
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More XML Text can be CDATA or PCDATA Entity References: &:&, >:>,… Processing Instructions: Comments:
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Well Formed XML Documents Elements must be properly nested Foundations of Databases But Not: Foundations of Databases There must be a unique root element Elements can be of ‘element content’ or ‘mixed content’: This is Mixed Content
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XML: Potential Flexible enough to represent anything Stock market, DNA, Music, Chemicals Weather information Wireless network configuration Enables easy information exchange Between companies Within companies Standard: everybody uses the same technology
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XML: Limitations XML is only a syntax for documents We need tools! Editors and parsers Programming APIs (for Java, C++, etc.) Languages to manipulate XML (how many books?) Schemas (What is a book like?) Storage (What if you have a lot of XML?) Transfer protocols (How do you exchange it?) What about XML in Chinese…? How can XML fit into my phone…? Query processing? …
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XML Schema Language
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DTDs: Document Type Descriptors Similar to a schema Grammar describing constraints on document structure and content XML Documents can be validated against a DTD
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Shortcomings of DTDs Useful for documents, but not so good for data: No support for structural re-use Object-oriented-like structures aren’t supported No support for data types Can’t do data validation Can have a single key item (ID), but: No support for multi-attribute keys No support for foreign keys (references to other keys) No constraints on IDREFs (reference only a Section)
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XSchema In XML format Includes primitive data types (integers, strings, dates,…) Supports value-based constraints (integers > 100) Inheritance Foreign keys …
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Example of XSchema …
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XML Storage
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Storing XML Data Different approaches: Storing as text Using RDBMS Using a native system Tailored for XML, (NATIX, Tamino, Ipedo, etc.) Performance of the various approaches depends on your application
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Storing XML as Text Simple Easy to compress No updates Need to parse the document every time it is needed
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Storing XML in RDBMS Uses existing RDBMS techniques Costly in space, takes time to reconstruct original document Example techniques: Schema with 2 relations: tag and value Schema with n relations: 1 per element name
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Accessing and Querying XML Data
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XML as a Tree: DOM DOM = Document Object Model Class hierarchy serving as an API to XML trees Methods of those classes can be used to manipulate XML (e.g., Node::child, Node::name) Can be used from Java, C++ to develop XML applications. Each node has an identity (i.e., a unique identifier) in the whole document
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XML as a DOM Tree Class hierarchy(node, element attribute) bibliography book titleauthorpublisheryear book author Foundations of Databases AbiteboulHullVianuAddison Wesley 1995
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XML as a Stream: SAX XML document = event stream. E.g., Opening tag ‘book’ Opening tag ‘title’ Text “Foundations of databases” Closing tag ‘title’ Opening tag ‘author’ Etc. SAX allow you to associate actions with those events to build applications Very efficient since it corresponds to events during parsing, but not always sufficient.
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XPath Language for navigating in an XML document (seen as a tree) One root node types of nodes: root, element, text, attribute, comment,… XPath expression defines navigation in the tree following axis: child, descendant, parent, ancestor,…
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XPath: Examples Find all the titles of all the books: //book/title Find the title of all books written by Charles Dickens //book[author=“Charles Dickens”]/title Find the title of the first section in the second chapter in “Great Expectations” //book[title=“Great Expectations”]/chapter[2]/section[1]/title Find the title of all sections that come after the second chapter in “Great Expectations”: //book[title=“Great Expectations”]/chapter[2]/following::section/title
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Querying XML Data Need for a language to query XML data Should yield XML output Should support standard query operations No schema required Several work on an XML query language: XML-QL, XQuery,..
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XQuery XPath included in XQuery FLWR expressions: for let where return FOR $x IN document("bib.xml") /bib/book WHERE $x/year > 1995 RETURN $x/title FOR $x IN document("bib.xml") /bib/book WHERE $x/year > 1995 RETURN $x/title Result: abc def ghi
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How to process XML Queries? Use indexes Need to identify nodes Need to know relations between nodes Labeling Schemes Dewey encoding Prefix-Postfix encoding Twigstack
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Web Services
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What are Web Services Programming interfaces for application to application communication on the Web platform-independent, language-independent object model-independent Possibility to activate methods on remote web servers (RPC) 2 main applications E-commerce Access to remote data
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XML and Web Services Exchange of information between application is in XML Input and Result Use of SOAP to generate messages Descriptions of the web service functionality given in XML, according to the WSDL schema Web Services standards use XML heavily
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Conclusions XML: a very active area Many research directions Many applications Standards not finalized yet: XQuery XML Schema Web Services…
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Some Important XML Standards XSL/XSLT: presentation and transformation standards RDF: resource description framework (meta- info such as ratings, categorizations, etc.) XPath/XPointer/XLink: standard for linking to documents and elements within Namespaces: for resolving name clashes DOM: Document Object Model for manipulating XML documents SAX: Simple API for XML parsing …
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References XML http://www.w3.org/XML/ http://www.w3.org/XML/ Sudarshan S. Chawathe: Describing and Manipulating XML Data. IEEE Data Engineering Bulletin 22(3)(1999) XML Standards http://www.w3.org/ (XSL, XPath, XSchema, DOM…) http://www.w3.org/ Storing XML Data Daniela Florescu, Donald Kossmann: Storing and Querying XML Data using an RDMBS. IEEE Data Engineering Bulletin 22(3)(1999) Hartmut Liefke, Dan Suciu: XMILL: An Efficient Compressor for XML Data. SIGMOD Conference 2000 XQuery http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery/ http://www.w3.org/TR/xquery/ Peter Fankhauser: XQuery Formal Semantics: State and Challenges. SIGMOD Record 30(3)(2001) Web Services http://www.w3.org/2002/ws/
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