
Study on Data Placement Strategies in Distributed RDF Stores
Description
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In this book, a novel benchmarking methodology is developed for data placement strategies; one that overcomes these limitations by using a data-placement-strategy-independent distributed RDF store to analyze the effect of the data placement strategies on query performance. Frequently used data placement strategies have been evaluated, and this evaluation challenges the commonly held belief that data placement strategies which emphasize local computation lead to faster query executions. Indeed, results indicate that queries with a high workload can be executed faster on hash-based data placement strategies than on, for example, minimal edge-cut covers. The analysis of additional measurements indicates that vertical parallelization (i.e., a well-distributed workload) may be more important than horizontal containment (i.e., minimal data transport) for efficient query processing. Two such data placement strategies are proposed: the first, found in the literature, is entitled overpartitioned minimal edge-cut cover, and the second is the newly developed molecule hash cover. Evaluation revealed a balanced query workload and a high horizontal containment, which lead to a high vertical parallelization. As a result, these strategies demonstrated better query performance than other frequently used data placement strategies. The book also tests the hypothesis that collocating small connected triple sets on the same compute node while balancing the amount of triples stored on the different compute nodes leads to a high vertical parallelization.
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Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Contents
- Introduction
- Research Questions
- Research Contributions
- Foundations
- Formalization of Graph Cover Strategies and SPARQL
- Architectures
- Indices
- Distributed Query Processing Strategies
- Fault Tolerance
- Further Challenges
- Related Work
- Graph Cover Strategies
- Evaluation Methodologies
- Methodology for Benchmarking Graph Cover Strategies
- Evaluation Measures
- Data Set and Queries
- Query Execution Strategies
- Distributed RDF Store for Arbitrary Graph Covers
- Evaluation of Common Graph Cover Strategies
- Experimental Setup
- Results
- Lessons Learned
- Discussion
- Combining the Benefits of Graph Clustering and Hash Partitioning
- Proposed Graph Cover Strategies
- Experimental Setup
- Results
- Lessons Learned
- Discussion
- Conclusion
- Distributed Query Execution Examples
- Example of Query Execution without Replication
- Example of Query Execution with Replication
- Proof of Semantic Correctness and Completeness of Koral's Distributed Query Execution Strategy
- Proof of Semantic Correctness and Completeness for the Distributed Query Execution Strategy Ignoring Triple Replication
- Proof of Knows Lemma
- Proof of Semantic Correctness and Completeness for the Distributed Query Execution Strategy With Triple Replication
- Proof of Unique Knows Theorem
- Proof of Similarity of the Replication-Aware Extension
- Additional Evaluation Details
- Characteristics of the Used Data Sets
- Generated Queries
- Query Execution Times
- Bibliography
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