316 research outputs found

    Compressed Text Indexes:From Theory to Practice!

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    A compressed full-text self-index represents a text in a compressed form and still answers queries efficiently. This technology represents a breakthrough over the text indexing techniques of the previous decade, whose indexes required several times the size of the text. Although it is relatively new, this technology has matured up to a point where theoretical research is giving way to practical developments. Nonetheless this requires significant programming skills, a deep engineering effort, and a strong algorithmic background to dig into the research results. To date only isolated implementations and focused comparisons of compressed indexes have been reported, and they missed a common API, which prevented their re-use or deployment within other applications. The goal of this paper is to fill this gap. First, we present the existing implementations of compressed indexes from a practitioner's point of view. Second, we introduce the Pizza&Chili site, which offers tuned implementations and a standardized API for the most successful compressed full-text self-indexes, together with effective testbeds and scripts for their automatic validation and test. Third, we show the results of our extensive experiments on these codes with the aim of demonstrating the practical relevance of this novel and exciting technology

    High-Order Entropy-Compressed Text Indexes

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    We present a novel implementation of compressed su~x arrays exhibiting new tradeoffs between search time and space occupancy for a given text (or sequence) of n symbols over an alphabet E, where each symbol is encoded by lg ]E I bits. We show that compressed su1~x arrays use just nHh + O(n lglg n~ lgl~ I n) bits, while retaining full text indexing functionalities, such as searching any pattern sequence of length m in O(mlg [E[ + polylog(n)) time. The term Hh < lg IEI denotes the hth-order empirical entropy of the text, which means that our index is nearly optimal in space apart from lower-order terms, achieving asymptotically the empirical entropy of the text (with a multiplicative constant 1). If the text is highly compressible so that H~ = o(1) and the alphabet size is small, we obtain a text index with o(m) search time that requires only o(n) bits. Further results and tradeoffs are reported in the paper

    Inverse Suffix Array Queries for 2-Dimensional Pattern Matching in Near-Compact Space

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    Optimal-Time Text Indexing in BWT-runs Bounded Space

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    Indexing highly repetitive texts --- such as genomic databases, software repositories and versioned text collections --- has become an important problem since the turn of the millennium. A relevant compressibility measure for repetitive texts is rr, the number of runs in their Burrows-Wheeler Transform (BWT). One of the earliest indexes for repetitive collections, the Run-Length FM-index, used O(r)O(r) space and was able to efficiently count the number of occurrences of a pattern of length mm in the text (in loglogarithmic time per pattern symbol, with current techniques). However, it was unable to locate the positions of those occurrences efficiently within a space bounded in terms of rr. Since then, a number of other indexes with space bounded by other measures of repetitiveness --- the number of phrases in the Lempel-Ziv parse, the size of the smallest grammar generating the text, the size of the smallest automaton recognizing the text factors --- have been proposed for efficiently locating, but not directly counting, the occurrences of a pattern. In this paper we close this long-standing problem, showing how to extend the Run-Length FM-index so that it can locate the occocc occurrences efficiently within O(r)O(r) space (in loglogarithmic time each), and reaching optimal time O(m+occ)O(m+occ) within O(rlog(n/r))O(r\log(n/r)) space, on a RAM machine of w=Ω(logn)w=\Omega(\log n) bits. Within O(rlog(n/r))O(r\log (n/r)) space, our index can also count in optimal time O(m)O(m). Raising the space to O(rwlogσ(n/r))O(r w\log_\sigma(n/r)), we support count and locate in O(mlog(σ)/w)O(m\log(\sigma)/w) and O(mlog(σ)/w+occ)O(m\log(\sigma)/w+occ) time, which is optimal in the packed setting and had not been obtained before in compressed space. We also describe a structure using O(rlog(n/r))O(r\log(n/r)) space that replaces the text and extracts any text substring of length \ell in almost-optimal time O(log(n/r)+log(σ)/w)O(\log(n/r)+\ell\log(\sigma)/w). (...continues...
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