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3 Contribution of This Research Better data models and query languages for temporal and spatio-temporal information Multi-layered architecture for spatio-temporal extensions on O-R systems Support further extensions and customization by end-users via user-defined spatio-temporal aggregates

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Data Models and Query Data Models and Query Languages of Languages of Spatio-Temporal InformationSpatio-Temporal Information

Cindy Xinmin ChenComputer Science Department

UCLAFebruary 28, 2001

2

The ProblemThe Problem Data models and query languages for spatio-

temporal databases: many different approaches proposed complexity of technical problem diversity of application requirements

Implementation: extensions for spatio-temporal information zero extensibility in Relational DBMS Object-Relational systems are better, but still

have many limitations

3

Contribution of This ResearchContribution of This Research Better data models and query languages for

temporal and spatio-temporal information Multi-layered architecture for spatio-temporal

extensions on O-R systems Support further extensions and customization by

end-users via user-defined spatio-temporal aggregates

4

OutlineOutline Temporal Data Models and Query Languages --

SQLT

Spatio-Temporal Data Models and Query Languages -- SQLST

Implementation of SQLST

More Abstract Representation of Spatio-Temporal Data

Conclusion

5

6

State of ArtState of Art More than 40 temporal data models according to

[Jensen and Snodgrass 99] Interval-based approach [Lorentzos 97]

same conceptual level and implementation level representations but requires interval coalescing after projection

TSQL2’s implicit time [Snodgrass 95] temporal joins are specified without ever

mentioning the time column in WHERE or SELECT clauses of the query

Point-based approach [Toman 98]

7

Interval-Based Time Model Interval-Based Time Model and Coalescingand Coalescing A temporal relation contains prescription information

Projection on Name and Physican:

Projection on Name and Drug:

Prescription(Melanie, Dr. Jones, Proventil, 3mg, [19960101, 19960131])Prescription(Melanie, Dr. Jones, Prozac, 3mg, [19960201, 19960229])Prescription(Melanie, Dr. Bond, Prozac, 3mg, [19960301, 19960331])

(Melanie, Dr. Jones, [19960101, 19960229])(Melanie, Dr. Bond, [19960301, 19960331])

(Melanie, Proventil, [19960101, 19960131])(Melanie, Prozac, [19960201, 19960331])

8

TSQL2TSQL2 Bitemporal Conceptual Data Model -- coalesced

data model Two dimensional time -- valid time and transaction

time Implicit time model -- no coalescing Lack of universality

9

TSQL2 -- An ExampleTSQL2 -- An Example Schema Definition

Query 1: find the drugs Melanie took in 1996 and the time she took them.

CREATE TABLE Prescription (Name CHAR(30), Physician CHAR(30), Drug CHAR(30), Dosage CHAR(30))AS VALID STATE DAY

SELECT DrugVALID INTERSECT(VALID(Prescription), PERIOD(‘[1996]’ AS DAY))FROM PrescriptionWHERE Name = “Melanie”

10

Point-Based ModelPoint-Based Model Expressive power [Toman 97] Use user-defined aggregates to express Allen's

interval operators Universality:

uniformly applicable to SQL, QBE and Datalog use current query languages’ construct types no new constructs are introduced

11

SQLSQLTT: Schema Definition: Schema Definition Define the Prescription relation

CREATE TABLE Prescription (Name CHAR(30), Physician CHAR(30), Drug CHAR(30), Dosage CHAR(30), VTime DATE)

12

Temporal Selection and JoinTemporal Selection and Join Query 1’: find the drugs Melanie took in 1996 and

the time she took them.

SELECT Drug, VTimeFROM PrescriptionWHERE Name = “Melanie” 19960101 <= VTime AND 19961231 >= VTime

13

Interval-Oriented ReasoningInterval-Oriented Reasoning Query 2: find the patients who have taken Proventil

throughout the time they took Prozac.

SELECT P1.NameFROM Prescription AS P1 P2WHERE P1.Name = P2.Name AND P1.Drug = “Proventil” AND P2.Drug = “Prozac”GROUP BY P1.NameHAVING DURING(P1.VTime. P2.VTime)

14

Interval-Oriented Reasoning (cont.)Interval-Oriented Reasoning (cont.) Query 2 in QBE

Prescription Name Physician Drug Dosage VTime P.G._name Proventil _vtime1 _name Prozac _vtime2

ConditionsDURING(_vtime1, _vtime2)

15

Interval-Oriented Reasoning (cont.)Interval-Oriented Reasoning (cont.) Query 2 in Datalog

query2(Name, during<VTime1, VTime2>) prescription(Name, _, “Proventil”, _, VTime1), prescription(Name, _, “Prozac”, _, VTime2).

16

Implementation of SQLImplementation of SQLTT on DB2 on DB2 From point-based representation to interval based

representation Difficulty of support temporal data model and query

language extensions on existed O-R systems only user-defined functions (UDFs) available

UDFs can not access the database tables directly

UDFs are hard to develop and debug

17

18

Previous WorkPrevious Work Constraint-based approach

Triangulation-based spatial objects + interval-based time [Chomicki 97]

Parametric rectangles + interval-based time [Cai 00]

Time as another dimension in space [Grumbach 98]

Composite spatio-temporal data types: mpoint and mregion [Güting 00]

Orthogonal space and time [Worboy 94]

19

Previous Work (cont.)Previous Work (cont.) Commercial DBMSs

no spatio-temporal extensions only spatial DataBlades, Extenders, etc.

provide a predefined library of functions offer no extensibility

20

Objective of SQLObjective of SQLSTST

orthogonality, minimality and extensibility separated temporal and spatial information minimal extensions to SQL additional constructs can be built in SQLST

21

Design and Implementation of SQLDesign and Implementation of SQLSTST

Define a minimal set of built-in primitives in procedure language

Use user-defined aggregates for further extension Data types:

Temporal data type -- time interval Spatial data types -- points, lines (finite straight

line segments), and counterclockwise directed triangles

22

Counterclockwise Directed TriangleCounterclockwise Directed Triangle A triangle is counterclockwise directed if its three

vertexes are counterclockwise orientated

Makes point-location problem easy inside(point, triangle)

01V3yV3x1V2yV2x1V1yV1x

T

V1 V2

V3

P’P

23

Application ExampleApplication Example Cyclone statistics for the northern Hemisphere from

NSF Arctic System Science Research Program

ID Trajectory Pressure Start Time End Time x1 y1 x2 y2960001 (1146, 1034, 1303, 1775) 1004 1996-05-01 1996-05-02960001 (1303, 1775, 1664, 1779) 995 1996-05-02 1996-05-03960001 (1664, 1779, 1957, 1018) 991 1996-05-03 1996-05-04

day1day2 day3

day4

24

SQLSQLSTST: Schema Definition: Schema Definition Define the Cyclone relation

Define the Island relation

CREATE TABLE Cyclone (ID INT, Trajectory LINE, Pressure REAL, Tstart DATE, Tend DATE)

CREATE TABLE Island (Name CHAR(30), Region TRIANGLE)

25

Spatio-Temporal QueriesSpatio-Temporal Queries Query 3: find all cyclones whose high pressure stage

(pressure > 1000mb) have lasted more than 3 days.

SELECT ID FROM CycloneWHERE Pressure > 1000GROUP BY IDHAVING DURATION(Tstart, Tend) > 3

26

Spatio-Temporal Queries (cont.)Spatio-Temporal Queries (cont.) Query 4: find the cyclones whose trajectory have

been enclosed by the island Misfortune.

SELECT ID FROM Cyclone, IslandWHERE Name = “Misfortune”GROUP BY IDHAVING CONTAIN(Trajectory, Region)

27

28

ApproachApproach Define a minimal set of ADTs built in C++ Use user-defined aggregates to define new spatio-

temporal primitives Allow end-users to extend and customize the system

for their application

29

Built-in Spatial FunctionsBuilt-in Spatial Functions length(line) area(triangle) center_of_mass(triangle) distance(point, point) distance(point, line) intersect(line, line) intersect(line, triangle) intersect(triangle, triangle)

30

User-Defined Aggregates (UDAs)User-Defined Aggregates (UDAs) UDAs provide a more general and powerful

mechanism for DB extensions ease of use no impedance mismatch of data types and

programming paradigms DB advantages -- scalability, data independence,

optimizability, etc.

31

Aggregate eXtension Language Aggregate eXtension Language (AXL) [Wang 00](AXL) [Wang 00] Stream orientated processing Three functions expressed in SQL

INTIALIZE: gives an initial value to the aggregate ITERATE: computes the intermediate aggregate

value for each new record TERMINATE: returns the final value computed for

the aggregate Local tables

state return

Built on the Berkeley DB storage manager

32

DurationDuration Calculates the total length of the time intervals

Cyclone(960001, _, _, 19960101, 19960105)Cyclone(960001, _, _, 19960111, 19960115)Cyclone(960001, _, _, 19960121, 19960125)

15 days

33

Duration (cont.)Duration (cont.)

AGGREGATE DURATION(Tstart DATE, Tend DATE) : INT{ TABLE state (i INT); INITIALIZE : { INSERT INTO state VALUES(Tend - Tstart + 1); } ITERATE : { UPDATE state SET i = i + (Tend - Tstart + 1); } TERMINATE : { INSERT INTO return SELECT i FROM state; }}

34

ContainContain Tests if one object contains another

returns 1 if true; returns nothing otherwise

contain(O1, O2) triangle t2 O2, vertex v of t2, triangle t1 O1, v inside t1

35

Contain (cont.)Contain (cont.)AGGREGATE CONTAIN(Object1 TRIANGLE, Object2 TRIANGLE) : INT{ TABLE state (b INT) AS VALUES(1); TABLE triangles(Object TRIANGLE); TABLE points(Vertex POINT); INITIALIZE : ITERATE : { INSERT INTO triangles VALUES(Object1); INSERT INTO points VALUES(Object2.Vertex);} TERMINATE : { UPDATE state SET b = 0 WHERE NOT EXIST (SELECT Vertex FROM points, triangles WHERE inside(Vertex, Object) = 1); INSERT INTO return SELECT b FROM state WHERE b = 1; }}

36

Other UDAsOther UDAs Overlap

tests if any edges of two objects intersect Edge_Distance

calculates the minimum distance from the vertexes of one object to the edges of the other object

Moving_Distance calculates the distance an object has traveled

continuously

37

Key Issue: PerformanceKey Issue: Performance Size of data set:

Cyclone table -- 200,000 tuples Island table -- 1000 tuples

Cases compared AXL using indexes AXL not using indexes C++ using indexes C++ not using indexes

Index Tstart on Cyclone table and Name on Island table

38

Performance -- DurationPerformance -- Duration Query 5: find the duration of the cyclones occurred

in June, 1996.

SELECT DURATION(Tstart, Tend) FROM CycloneWHERE 19960601 <= Tstart AND 19960630 >= TstartGROUP BY ID

39

Performance – Duration (cont.)Performance – Duration (cont.)

40

Performance – ContainPerformance – Contain Query 6: find the cyclones which occurred in June,

1996 and have been enclosed by the region of the island Misfortune.

SELECT IDFROM Cyclone, IslandWHERE 19960601 <= Tstart AND 19960630 >= Tstart AND Name = “Misfortune”GROUP BY IDHAVING CONTAIN(Region, Trajectory)

41

Performance – Contain (cont.)Performance – Contain (cont.)

42

43

Abstract ModelAbstract Model Objective: flexibility

user can decide which level of abstraction they want

may have more than two layers Data types:

temporal data type -- time instants spatial data types – points, lines, and polygons

44

A Spatio-Temporal ObjectA Spatio-Temporal Object The concrete model -- space triangles and time

intervals

A more abstract representation -- sequence of snapshots

(S , ((2,2),(6,2),(2,6)), [1,10])(S , ((2,6),(6,2),(6,6)), [1,10]) 1<=t<=10

S

2 4 6 8

(S, [(2,2),(2,6),(6,6),(6,2)], 1)(S, [(2,2),(2,6),(6,6),(6,2)], 2)

……(S, [(2,2),(2,6),(6,6),(6,2)], 10)

6

4

2

45

Schema DefinitionSchema Definition The Cyclone relation

The Island relation

CREATE TABLE Cyclone (ID INT, Position POINT, Pressure REAL, Time DATE)

CREATE TABLE Island (Name CHAR(30), Extent POLYGON)

46

MappingMapping UDA -- map

Table function -- decompose

(Point, Time Instant)

(Line, Time Interval)

(Polygon)

(Triangle)

47

Spatio-Temporal QueriesSpatio-Temporal Queries Query 3’: find all cyclones whose high pressure

stage (pressure > 1000mb) have lasted more than 3 days.

SELECT NEW.ID FROM (SELECT ID, MAP(Position, Time) FROM Cyclone WHERE Pressure > 1000 GROUP BY ID) AS NEW(ID, Trajectory, Tstart, Tend)GROUP BY NEW.IDHAVING DURATION(New.Tstart, New.Tend) > 3

48

Spatio-Temporal Queries (cont.)Spatio-Temporal Queries (cont.) Query 4’: find the cyclones whose trajectory have

been enclosed by the island Misfortune.

SELECT NEW.ID FROM (SELECT ID, MAP(Position, Time), T.Region FROM Cyclone, Island, TABLE(decompose(Extent)) AS T WHERE Name = “Misfortune” GROUP BY ID, T.Region) AS NEW(ID, Trajectory, Tstart, Tend, Region)GROUP BY NEW.IDHAVING CONTAIN(New.Region, New.Trajectory)

49

ConclusionConclusion Better data models and query languages for

temporal and spatio-temporal information Multi-layered architecture for spatio-temporal

extensions on O-R systems Support further extensions and customization by

end-users via user-defined spatio-temporal aggregates

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