6,356 research outputs found

    An Object memory for an object-oriented database management system

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    Ankara : The Department of Computer Engineering and Information Sciences and the Institute of Engineering and Sciences of Bilkent Univ. , 1988.Thesis (Master's) -- Bilkent University), 1988.Includes bibliographical references leaves 86-89.Object-oriented paradigm is an approach that can be applied in various areas of computing. In this approach, each entity is represented by an object which captures the state and the behaviour of the entity. In this thesis, a focused survey of object-oriented paradigm in general and object-oriented database management systems in particular has been carried out and an object memory module is designed and implemented for an object-oriented database management system prototype. The object memory module handles the representation, access and manipulation of objects in the system and provides the primitive functions that are necessary in the development of the prototype.Kesim, F NihanM.S

    An Object-Oriented Heterogeneous Database Architecture

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    Many data management environments face a critical need to integrate heterogeneous data-data that are stored in varying locations using various data management systems with diverse data formats and schemas. To address this problem, the database research community has developed the concept of a heterogeneous database system (HDB) that provides users with the illusion of a single unified database. However, HDBs rely on the implicit assumption that all data to be integrated into the HDB are stored in full-fledged database management systems (DBMS). This assumption leaves environments that need to integrate non-DBMS data unserved by HDB systems. Furthermore, HDBs are complex software solutions that are not easily lmplementable by database developers wrestling with heterogeneous data. This thesis presents a new, easily implemented HDB architecture that is suitable for integrating non-DBMS data. The key to our architecture is using an object-oriented database management system (OODBMS) as an implementation tool. Rather than developing an HDB from scratch, we leverage the power and facilities of the underlying OODBMS to provide a query language, application programmer interface, interactive query interface, concurrency control, etc. Using object-oriented technology gives us an additional benefit-our HDB becomes an object-oriented HDB (OOHDB) providing users with greater data model expressivity along with a powerful behavioral component. The OOHDB architecture we present is independent of a particular OODBMS and can be implemented using a number of commercial OODBMSs for a variety of data management environments. We describe one implementation of our architecture using the GemStone OODBMS for accessing heterogeneous materials science data. This implementation demonstrates how easily the architecture can be implemented. We use this implementation to analyze the performance of the architecture and examine the effectiveness of strategies for enhancing performance. We conclude that for many environments with heterogeneous non-DBMS data, our OOHDB architecture provides a good solution that is easy to implement using commercial OODBMS technology

    An object query language for multimedia federations

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    The Fischlar system provides a large centralised repository of multimedia files. As expansion is difficult in centralised systems and as different user groups have a requirement to define their own schemas, the EGTV (Efficient Global Transactions for Video) project was established to examine how the distribution of this database could be managed. The federated database approach is advocated where global schema is designed in a top-down approach, while all multimedia and textual data is stored in object-oriented (O-O) and object-relational (0-R) compliant databases. This thesis investigates queries and updates on large multimedia collections organised in the database federation. The goal of this research is to provide a generic query language capable of interrogating global and local multimedia database schemas. Therefore, a new query language EQL is defined to facilitate the querying of object-oriented and objectrelational database schemas in a database and platform independent manner, and acts as a canonical language for database federations. A new canonical language was required as the existing query language standards (SQL: 1999 and OQL) axe generally incompatible and translation between them is not trivial. EQL is supported with a formally defined object algebra and specified semantics for query evaluation. The ability to capture and store metadata of multiple database schemas is essential when constructing and querying a federated schema. Therefore we also present a new platform independent metamodel for specifying multimedia schemas stored in both object-oriented and object-relational databases. This metadata information is later used for the construction of a global schemas, and during the evaluation of local and global queries. Another important feature of any federated system is the ability to unambiguously define database schemas. The schema definition language for an EGTV database federation must be capable of specifying both object-oriented and object-relational schemas in the database independent format. As XML represents a standard for encoding and distributing data across various platforms, a language based upon XML has been developed as a part of our research. The ODLx (Object Definition Language XML) language specifies a set of XMLbased structures for defining complex database schemas capable of representing different multimedia types. The language is fully integrated with the EGTV metamodel through which ODLx schemas can be mapped to 0-0 and 0-R databases

    Object-oriented modeling and design of database federations

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    We describe a logical architecture and a general semantic framework for precise specification of so-called database federations. A database federation provides for tight coupling of a collection of heterogeneous component databases into a global integrated system. Our approach to database federation integrates in a uniform and systematic manner the underlying database schemas of the component legacy systems to a separate, newly defined integrated database schema. This integrated database is completely virtual, and will constitute the actual federated database. That is, queries posed against the federated system will be posed against this virtual integrated database; these global queries will then be mapped by the mediator to actual local queries against the existing (legacy) component databases. Our approach is based upon the UML/OCL data model. UML is the de facto standard language for analysis and design in object-oriented frameworks, and is being employed more and more for analysis and design of Information systems, in particular information systems based on databases and their applications. Database specifications often involve specifications of constraints, and the Object Constraint Language (OCL) - as part of UML - can aid in the unambiguous modelling of database constraints. One of the central notions in database modelling and in constraint specifications is the notion of a database view; a database view closely corresponds to the notion of derived class in UML. We will employ OCL and the notion of derived class as a means to treat (inter-)database constraints and database views in a federated context. We will also offer a transaction model for a simple set of updates in database federations. The paper will demonstrate that our particular mediating system integrates component schemas without loss of constraint information. Furthermore, we will discuss a mapping of database specifications in terms of UML/OCL to the relational model.

    Database independent Migration of Objects into an Object-Relational Database

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    This paper reports on the CERN-based WISDOM project which is studying the serialisation and deserialisation of data to/from an object database (objectivity) and ORACLE 9i.Comment: 26 pages, 18 figures; CMS CERN Conference Report cr02_01

    The Design and Implementation of Database-Access Middleware for Live Object-Oriented Programming

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    We describe middleware and programming environment tools (JPie/qt) that allow programmers to access relational databases in an object-oriented way. Building on top of the JDBC API and leveraging live dynamic class creation and modification in JPie, the JPie/qt middleware presents the user with a simple interactive mechanism for creating object-oriented applications that access databases. Classes are generated mirroring the database schema and programmers deal directly with these classes. Objects of these classes can be database-bound, so reads and writes to their fields are reflected in the relational database immediately. Database transactions are supported by connecting commit and rollback to Java exception semantics
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