Post on 22-Dec-2015
transcript
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Keys for XML
Peter Buneman, Susan Davidson, Wenfei FanPeter Buneman, Susan Davidson, Wenfei Fan
Carmem Hara , Wang-Chiew TanCarmem Hara , Wang-Chiew Tan
University of Pennsylvania
Temple University
Universidade Federal do Parana, Brazil
Jonathan Mamou
Keys for XML 2
Keys in DB design
Essential part of DB design Invariant connection between the tuple and the
real-world entity Important in update
– Guarantee that an update will affect precisely one tuple
…
Keys for XML 3
Keys in XML
XML documents are to do – at least - double duty as databases
Examination of existing DTDs reveals a number of cases in which some element or attribute is specified as a “unique identifier” in comments
Various key specifications in XML Standard, XML Data, XML Schema
Keys for XML 4
Components: XML vs. relational DB
<db><student> <name> Smith </name>
<course> Math </course> <grade> B </grade>
</student><student>
<name> Jones </name><course> Math </course><grade> A+ </grade>
</student><student>
<name> Smith </name><course> CS </course>
<grade> A- </grade>
</student>
</db>
Namecoursegrade
SmithMathB
JonesMathA+
SmithCSA-
Keys for XML 5
Components: XML vs. relational DB (cont’d)
DB If 2 tuples agree on their name and course attributes they agree everywhere
XML If 2 elements agree on
the name and course subelements then they are the same element
Node identification? Equality?
Keys for XML 6
Nodes - Value Equality name key for person nodes name may have a complex structure: first-
name, last-name
dept
...
db
company government university
employee employee employee
@id name@id @id
company
employee
employee
name
name
firstName lastName
“Bill” “Clinton”
“Bill Clinton”
Keys for XML 7
Hierarchical structure
Hierarchically structured databases, e.g. scientific data formats
Top-level key to identify components of a document
Secondary key to identify sub-components– Book/chapter/section– Bible/book/chapter/verse
Keys for XML 8
Absolute and relative keysIn an XML document, how to identify A book? a chapter? a section?
db
book bookbook book
title chapter
“XML”
chapter
section section
“1” “...”
“6”
number section
number text number
“10”
number
“1” number
“1”
section
number
“5”
title chapter
“SGML” number
“1”
chapter
number
“10”text
“…”
Keys for XML 9
XML standard - ID attribute
<!ATTLIST book titleID #required> <!ATTLIST chapter number ID #required> <!ATTLIST section number ID #required>
Internal “pointers” rather than keys Scoping: ID attribute unique within the entire document rather than among a
designated set of elements– can’t express relative keys, e.g., for chapters/sections.
Limit to using attributes rather than elements unary: at most one ‘key’ can be defined, in terms of a single attribute
value equality: on text (string) defined in a attribute type : keys must come with a DTD
Keys for XML 10
XML Data Introduces a notion of keys explicitly<elementType id="booktable">
<element id="titleID" type="#title"> <element type="#author"> <element type="#pages"><key id="bookkey"> <keyPart href="#titleID"/>
</key>
</elementType> BUT
– Can only be defined for element types rather than for certain collections of elements e.g. book, articles, …
Keys for XML
XPath Possible to specify interesting fragments of a
document Syntax similar to navigating directories in a
file system//arbitrary path. empty path/ document root - path concatenator* any single node name
Keys for XML 12
XPath example
Select BBB elements which have any attribute <AAA> <BBB id = "b1"/> <BBB id = "b2"/> <BBB name = "bbb"/> <BBB/> </AAA>
//BBB[@*]
Keys for XML 13
Xpath example (cont’d)
<AAA> <BBB></BBB> <XXX>
<DDD><FFF>
<GGG></GGG>
</FFF> </DDD> </XXX> <CCC> </CCC> </AAA>
//GGG/ancestor*::
Keys for XML 14
XML-Schema<element name = “book”> <complexType>
<sequence> <element name=“title” type=“string”/> <element name=“chapters” max0occurs=“unbounded”>
<complexType> ... </complexType> </element>
</sequence> </complexType>
<key name=“k” ><selector xpath=“.”/>
<field xpath=“title”/></key>
</element>
Keys for XML 15
XML Schema (cont’d)
Allow to specify keys in term of XPath expressions BUT
– XPath is a relatively complex language (move down, sideways, upwards, predicates and functions can be embedded)
– Equivalence/containment of XPath expressions is unresolved No efficient way to tell whether two keys are equivalent.
– Value equality: restricted to text
– Relative key not addressed
– Structural requirement: key paths must exist and be unique.
Keys for XML 16
A new key constraint language for XML
Powerful enough to express absolute and relative keys
Simple enough to be reasoned about efficiently– Equivalence/containment– consistency (satisfiability)
– implication (keys derived from others)
Capturing the semistructured nature of XML data:– independent of any types/schema
– no structural requirements: tolerating missing/multiple key paths
Keys for XML 17
Outline
Node addresses – testing whether 2 nodes are the same node
Value equality – testing whether 2 nodes have the same value
Path expression language Absolute key Key Inference Relative key Strong key Some issues
Keys for XML 18
Tree representation
DOM (Document Object Model) Document is a hierarchical structure of nodes
– Element nodes– Attribute nodes– Text nodes
Keys for XML 19
Tree representation (cont’d)<db>
<composer><name> J.S. Bach </name> <born> 1685 &</born><work num="BWV82“>
<title> Ich habe genug </title></work><work num="BWV552“></work>
</composer><composer period="baroque“>
<name> G.F. Handel </name><work num="HWV19“>
<title> Art Thou Troubled? </title></work>
</composer></db<
Keys for XML 20
Tree representation (cont’d)
““Art Thou Troubled”Art Thou Troubled”
namename
““J.S. Bach”J.S. Bach”
1
bornborn
titletitle numnum
““BWV82”BWV82”
dbdb
composercomposer
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1
workwork
““1685”1685”
““Iche abe genug”Iche abe genug”
numnum
““BWV552”BWV552”
workworknamename
periodeperiode
““Baroque”Baroque”
composercomposer
1
1
““G.F. Handel”G.F. Handel”
numnum
workwork
titletitle
““HWV19”HWV19”
11 11
2
2
34
1
@num @periode@num@num
Keys for XML 21
Tree representation (cont’d) Attribute node: name+text, terminal Text node: text, terminal Element node:
– name, may have children– Text and element children held in an array
• Index in the array determined by the order of the subelement in the document
– Attribute children held in a dictionary• Name of the attribute used as the index
Edge label uniquely identify children
Keys for XML 22
Node Address
A path of edge labels from the root uniquely identifies a node <l1#…#ln>– <1#2#1>, <1#3#@num>
An attribute node can only occur at the end of a node address
Order of attributes is unimportant Order of subelements specified by their indexes Address of a subnode relative to a node
– Any subnode of a node with address <a> will have a node address of the form <a#b> where <b> is the address of the subnode relative to <a>.
Keys for XML 23
Value Equality
Value of a node1.A set S of relative addresses of its subnodes
2.A partial function from S to names
3.A partial function from S to texts
2 nodes are value-equal if they agree on 1, 2, 3 Notation: a =v b
Keys for XML 24
Value Equality (example)S = {., <1>, <2>, <1,1>, <2,1>}
...
db
person personperson person
@pnone
“234-5678”@phone
“123-4567”
name
firstName lastName
“George” “Bush”
name
firstName lastName
“George” “Bush”
1
11
2 1
1 1
2
Keys for XML 25
Path expressions
How to identify nodes in a tree? Expression involving node names (tags +
attributes) that describes a set of paths in the document tree– XPath (XML-Schema)– Regular expressions (semistructured data)
Keys for XML 26
Regular Path Expressions
db
empsdepts
mgremp
“Mary” “John” “Bill”
name name
emp
name
In the normal syntax of regular expressions:
db.emps.emp
db.(depts.dept.mgr |emps.emp)
db._*.name
dept
Keys for XML 27
Language for path expression
2 necessary properties– Concatenation operation, not uniform presentation
in XPath• Concatenate a/b with /c/d : a/b//c/d
– A path should only move down the tree• Navigation axis in XPath
Keys for XML 28
Language for path expression Empty path “ε” (“.”) Node name (tag/attribute name) Wild card “_”, single node name (“*”) Arbitrary path “_*” (“//”) Concatenation of paths P, Q is P.Q (“/”) Notation
– n[P]: set of nodes (node addresses) reached by starting at node n and following a path that conforms to P
– [P] := root[P]
Keys for XML 29
Examples Simple path
– <2#2>[title] = {<2#2#1>}
– [composer.work] = {<1#3>, <1#4>, <2#2>}
Complex path– <2#2>[_*] = {<2#2>, <2#2#1>, <2#2#1#1>,
<2#2#@num>}– [composer._] = {<1#1>, <1#2>, <1#3>, <1#4>,
<2#1>, <2#2>}– [_*.num] = {<1#3#@num>, <1#4#@num>,
<2#2#@num>}
Keys for XML 31
Key specification
Necessary to specify– Set on which we are defining the key (relation)– “Attributes” (set of column names)
Pair (Q, {P1, …, Pn})
– Target path Q path expression: target set on which the key constraint is to hold
– Key path {P1, …, Pn} set of simple path expressions
Keys for XML 32
Key specification (cont’d)
– Target path Q – Key path {P1, …, Pn}
For any node n in [Q], there is a set of nodes n[Pi] found by following Pi from n (may be empty)
Examples1. (person.employees, {name.firstname, name.lastname})2. (composer, {name})3. (composer, {born})
Keys for XML 33
Formal DefinitionA node n satisfies a key specification (Q,{P1,... , Pk}) iff for any
n1, n2 in n[Q],
if for all i, 1<= i <= k , there exist z1 in n1[Pi] and z2 in n2[Pi] such that z1 =v z2
then n1 = n2. Value equalityValue equality z1 =v z2 Node equalityNode equality : 2 nodes are equal if they have the same node
address n1 = n2
The values associated with key paths uniquely identify a node in the target set
Not part of the schema, data
Keys for XML 34
Remarks For any n1, n2 in [Q], if Pi is missing at either n1 or n2
then n1[Pi] and n2[Pi] are by definition disjoint
Multiple nodes<db>
<A> <B> 1 </B> </A>
<A> <B> 1 </B> <B> 2 </B> </A>
</db>
Key (A, {B}) with respect to the root.
The document does not satisfy the key.
Keys for XML 35
Example of keys (_*.person, {id})
– 2 persons elements are disjoint on their id fields
(person, {ε})– Any 2 person nodes immediately under the root have different
values
(employee, {})– Empty key. There is at most one employee under the root
(_*, {id})– Any 2 nodes are disjoint on their id fields up to value-equality
– Semantics of ID attribute in the XML standard
Keys for XML 36
XML vs. relational
XML, paths that define keys – Need not exist (null-
valued keys)
– Do not have to be unique
– Key paths specify a set of addresses within a document
Relational DB– Key values cannot be
null, must exist
– Have to be unique
– 1NF requires each component of every tuple to be atomic value, not set
Keys for XML 37
Remarks Equivalence of 2 path expressions is decidable Given a definition of equality on tree, do we need to have
more than one key path in a key specification?– All key attributes must be represented as subnodes of some node
– Constrain this node to contain only those subnodes
– Too restrictive, unnecessary interference between key specifications and data models
Allow a (possible empty) set of nodes at the end of each key path– How to require each of the key paths to exist and to be unique?
Keys for XML 38
Remarks (cont’d)
Language of path expression – Need something more powerful to express Q
(person.(mother | father)*, {id})
A person element followed by zero or more father or mother elements
Provisional language of path expressions Does not change in the way of the theory
Keys for XML 39
Key inference In relational DB
– Infer some keys from the presence of others
If (Q, S) is a key and S S’, then so is (Q, S’)– Counterpart of relational inference rule
If (Q.Q’, {P}) is a key, then so is (Q, {Q’.P})– tree-like structure : if a node is identified in a tree then
its ancestor are also determined I.e. if a key path P uniquely identifies a node n in [Q.Q’] then Q’.P is a key path for the ancestor of n in [Q].
Keys for XML 40
Key Inference (cont’d)
If (Q,S) is a key and Q’ Q,then (Q’, S) is also a key– Any key of the set [Q] is also a key for any subset of [Q]
For any finite set Σ of keys, there exists an (finite) XML document satisfying Σ– Key paths may be missing, e.g. (_*,{id})
• If key path was required to exist at all nodes specified by the target path, the XML document would have to be infinite to satisfy the key
– Only holds in the absence of DTDs
Keys for XML 41
Key Inference
Key K = (X, {}) DTD D: <!ELEMENT foo (X, X)>
foo foo
No XML document that both conforms to D and satisfies K
DTDs interact with XML key constraint
X X X
Keys for XML 43
Relative key - Motivation Motivated by scientific data format, hierarchical structure,
large set of entries at the top-level Protein sequence database Swiss-prot
– Accession number (key) for each entry– Within each entry, sequence of citations each identified by a
number 1, 2, 3, … Linguistic database – recording of speech
– Data sets held in files– Metadata provided by directory structure– /timit/train/dr1/fcjjf0/sa1.wav– TIMIT corpus, training set, dialect region 1, female speaker,
speaker-ID "cjf0", sentence text "sa1", speech waveform file
Keys for XML 44
An absolute key for booksAn absolute key to identify a book: (book, {title} ) target path: book, starting from the root and identifying a
collection of books key path: title; its value uniquely identifies a bookabsolute: defined on the entire document
section
db
book bookbook book
title chapter
“XML”
chapter
section
“1” “...”
“6”
number section
number text number
“10”
number
“1” number
“1”
section
number
“5”
title chapter
“SGML” number
“1”
chapter
number
“10”text
“…”
Keys for XML 45
Relative key - definition
Like the key of a weak entity set in DBStudios(name, address)Crews(number)
A document satisfies a relative key specification (Q, (Q’,S)) iff for all nodes n in [Q], n satisfies the key (Q’,S).
Absolute keys are a special case of relative keys– (Q’,S) equivalent to (ε, (Q’,S))
Keys for XML 46
A relative key for chaptersA relative key: (book, (chapter, {number} ) )
A chapter number uniquely identifies a chapter within a book! Context path: book target path: chapter, starting at a book key path: numberrelative: defined on sub-documents, relative to the context
section
db
book bookbook book
title chapter
“XML”
chapter
section
“1” “...”
“6”
number section
number text number
“10”
number
“1” number
“1”
section
number
“5”
title chapter
“SGML” number
“1”
chapter
number
“10”text
“…”
Keys for XML 47
Absolute/Relative Key What is the difference between
– Absolute key (book.chapter, {number})
– Relative key (book, (chapter, {number} ) )
section
db
book bookbook book
title chapter
“XML”
chapter
section
“1” “...”
“6”
number section
number text number
“10”
number
“1” number
“1”
section
number
“5”
title chapter
“SGML” number
“1”
chapter
number
“10”text
“…”
Keys for XML 48
A relative key for sectionsKey: (book.chapter, (section, {number} ) )
A section number uniquely identifies a section within a particular chapter of a particular book!
relative to the chapter containing the section, and to the book containing the chapter
“XML”
“1” “...” “10”
db
book bookbook book
title chapter chapter
section section
“6”
number section
number text number
number
“1” number
“1”
section
number
“5”
title chapter
“SGML” number
“1”
chapter
number
“10”text
“…”
Keys for XML 49
Transitivity of relative keys
A relative key such as (bible.book.chapter,(verse, {number}))
does not uniquely identify a particular verse in the bible
Book name, chapter number, verse number verse
Keys for XML 50
“immediately precedes” relation
(Q1, (Q’1,S1)) immediately precedes (Q2, (Q’2,S2)) if Q2 = Q1.Q’1
– (bible, (book,{name})) immediately precedes
(bible.book, (chapter,{number})) – Any absolute key immediately precedes itself
Keys for XML 51
“precede” relation
Precede is the transitive closure of the immediately precedes relation– Qn = Q1.Q’1…Q’n-1
(bible, (book, {name})),
(bible.book,(chapter, {number})),
(bible.book.chapter,(verse, {number}))
Keys for XML 52
Transitivity of relative keys
A set Σ of relative keys is transitive if for any relative key K1 = (Q1,(Q’1,S1)) in Σ there is a key K2 = (ε,(Q’2,S2)) in Σ which precedes K1
Any transitive set of relative key must contain some absolute key
Keys for XML 53
Transitivity of relative keys - example
TRANSITIVE SET
(ε,(bible.book, {name}))
(bible.book,(chapter, {number}))
(bible.book.chapter,(verse, {number}))
Keys for XML 54
Insertion-friendly relative keys
Transitive key specification(ε, (university, {name}))
(university, (dept.employee, {emp-id}))
Identify an employee: university name + emp-id Add an employee: specify a dept for the employee No way to identify a dept
– Many ways to add an employee!!!
Keys for XML 55
Insertion-friendly relative keys (cont’d)
Insert an element in the “keyed” part of the document unambiguously by specifying where to insert the element using keys.
A set Σ of relative keys is insertion-friendly if it is transitive and whenever (Q1,(Q’1.n,S1)) Σ, there is a relative key (Q2,(Q’2,S2)) Σ where |Q’2| > 0 and Q1. Q’1 = Q2.Q’2.– n is a node name
Every element with a prefix along the path Q1.Q’1 can be identified through some keys
Keys for XML 56
Insertion-friendly relative keys (cont’d)
(ε, (university, {name}))
(university, (dept, {dept-name}))
(university, (dept.employee, {emp-id}))
n = employee
Keys for XML 57
Insertion-friendly relative keys (cont’d)
(ε, (university, {name}))(university, (dept, {dept-name}))(university, (dept.employee, {emp-id}))
Nothing about the dept is necessary to identify employees!!!
Anomaly that occurs in non-second NF of relational databases
Employees should not be children of department nodes, but only of university nodes
Linkage between employees and department should be expressed through a foreign key
Keys for XML 58
Notation for relative key
If system of relative keys is transitive, it forms a hierarchical structure create a compressed syntax for such systems
Basic syntactic form
Q1{P1 ,...,Pk1}.Q2{P1,...,Pk2}. ...Qn{P1 ,...,Pkn}
Keys for XML 59
Notation for relative key (cont’d)
bible{}.book{name}.chapter{number}.verse{number}
(ε, (bible, {}))(bible, (book, {name})(bible.book, (chapter,{number}))(bible.book.chapter, (verse,{number}))
company{name}[.employee{id}, .department{name}]
company{name}.employee{id}company{name}.department{name}
Keys for XML 60
Notation for relative key
Compact and understandable Ensure the internal consistency of the document To tell other how to cite a component of our
document Our document have a structured “core”
Keys for XML 62
Stronger definitions of keys
Requirements imposed by a key in relational DB:– Uniqueness of a key– Existence of key
Key paths exist and are unique (for 1 i n, n[Pi] contains exactly one node)– name is unique at <1>– work and num are not unique at this node
Keys for XML 63
Stronger definitions of keys (cont’d)
A node n satisfies a strong key specification (Q, {P1, …, Pk}) if– For all n’ in n[Q] and for all Pi, Pi exists and is
unique at n’.
– For any n1, n2 in n[Q], if for all I, n1[Pi] =v n2[Pi] then n1=n2
Keys for XML 64
Stronger definitions of keys (cont’d)
(_*.person, {id}) – Any 2 person elements, have unique id and differ on
those elements
(person, {ε})– Unchanged
(employees, {})– Unchanged
Keys for XML 65
Stronger definitions of keys (cont’d)
(_*, {k})– Every element has a key k, including element whose
name is k Finite satisfiability? Impose an infinite chain of k nodes
– No finite document satisfies it Because of the requirement of existence of key
paths– Structural constraint
Keys for XML 66
Relative Strong Key
A document satisfies a strong relative key specification (Q, (Q’,S)) iff for all nodes n in [Q], n satisfies the strong key (Q’,S)
Keys for XML 68
Node names as key values
Key specification must cover the practical cases without using definitions that are too complex to allow any kind of reasoning about keys
Issue in “unconstrained” XML: interchanging structure (the names) with data (their values)
Keys for XML 69
“unconstrained” XML<db>
<parts> <widget> <id> 123 </id>
<w> 1.5 </w> </widget>
<widget> <id> 234 </id>
<w> 2.5 </w> </widget>
<gadget> <id> 123 </id>
<w> 3.2 </w> </gadget> </parts>
</db>
<db> <parts>
<part> <type> widget </type> <id> 123 </id> <w> 1.5 </w>
</part> <part> <type> widget </type> <id> 234 </id> <w> 2.5 </w>
</part> <part> <type> gadget </type> <id> 123 </id> <w> 3.2 </w>
</part> </parts>
</db>
Keys for XML 70
Node names as key values (cont’d)
“Unconstrained” XML– Type of a part is expressed in the tag– Key constraint: parts{}[.widget{id},.gadget{id}]
Alternative XML representation – type expressed as an attribute or subelement of a
part element– Key constraint: parts{}[.part{type,id}]
Keys for XML 71
Introducing a new part type
Introduce a thingy “unconstrained”
– Change key specification– parts{}[.widget{id},.gadget{id},.thingy{id}]
Alternative– No change parts{}[.part{type,id}]
Ability to interchange structure and data is supposed to be one of the strong points of semistructured data and XML
Keys for XML 72
Solution
Adding a “virtual” subelement node-name to each named node, whose value consists of the node name
Key: parts{}._{node-name, id} Does not alter any of the properties
expected to hold for keys Account for any practical use of tag names
in keys
Keys for XML 73
Conclusion
A new key constraint language for XML:
– independent of any schema specifications for XML
– powerful enough to express absolute and relative keys
– simple enough to be reasoned about efficiently
In contrast to their relational counterparts:
– XML keys are more complex
– the analyses of XML keys are far more intricate
Keys for XML 74
References
Peter Buneman, Susan Davidson, Wenfei Fan, Carmem Hara, and Wang-Chiew Tan. Keys for XML. WWW10 (2001) http://db.cis.upenn.edu/DL/xmlkeys.ps
Peter Buneman, Susan Davidson, Wenfei Fan, Carmem Hara, and Wang-Chiew Tan. Reasoning about keys for XML. University of Pennsylvania. Technical Report MS-CIS-00-26, 2000 http://db.cis.upenn.edu/DL/absolute-full.ps