2 research outputs found
Querying Schemas With Access Restrictions
We study verification of systems whose transitions consist of accesses to a
Web-based data-source. An access is a lookup on a relation within a relational
database, fixing values for a set of positions in the relation. For example, a
transition can represent access to a Web form, where the user is restricted to
filling in values for a particular set of fields. We look at verifying
properties of a schema describing the possible accesses of such a system. We
present a language where one can describe the properties of an access path, and
also specify additional restrictions on accesses that are enforced by the
schema. Our main property language, AccLTL, is based on a first-order extension
of linear-time temporal logic, interpreting access paths as sequences of
relational structures. We also present a lower-level automaton model,
Aautomata, which AccLTL specifications can compile into. We show that AccLTL
and A-automata can express static analysis problems related to "querying with
limited access patterns" that have been studied in the database literature in
the past, such as whether an access is relevant to answering a query, and
whether two queries are equivalent in the accessible data they can return. We
prove decidability and complexity results for several restrictions and variants
of AccLTL, and explain which properties of paths can be expressed in each
restriction.Comment: VLDB201