Answering (Unions of) Conjunctive Queries using Random Access and Random-Order Enumeration

December 23, 2019 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐Ÿ› ACM SIGACT-SIGMOD-SIGART Symposium on Principles of Database Systems

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Authors Nofar Carmeli, Shai Zeevi, Christoph Berkholz, Benny Kimelfeld, Nicole Schweikardt arXiv ID 1912.10704 Category cs.DB: Databases Citations 54 Venue ACM SIGACT-SIGMOD-SIGART Symposium on Principles of Database Systems Last Checked 2 months ago
Abstract
As data analytics becomes more crucial to digital systems, so grows the importance of characterizing the database queries that admit a more efficient evaluation. We consider the tractability yardstick of answer enumeration with a polylogarithmic delay after a linear-time preprocessing phase. Such an evaluation is obtained by constructing, in the preprocessing phase, a data structure that supports polylogarithmic-delay enumeration. In this paper, we seek a structure that supports the more demanding task of a "random permutation": polylogarithmic-delay enumeration in truly random order. Enumeration of this kind is required if downstream applications assume that the intermediate results are representative of the whole result set in a statistically valuable manner. An even more demanding task is that of a "random access": polylogarithmic-time retrieval of an answer whose position is given. We establish that the free-connex acyclic CQs are tractable in all three senses: enumeration, random-order enumeration, and random access; and in the absence of self-joins, it follows from past results that every other CQ is intractable by each of the three (under some fine-grained complexity assumptions). However, the three yardsticks are separated in the case of a union of CQs (UCQ): while a union of free-connex acyclic CQs has a tractable enumeration, it may (provably) admit no random access. For such UCQs we devise a random-order enumeration whose delay is logarithmic in expectation. We also identify a subclass of UCQs for which we can provide random access with polylogarithmic access time. Finally, we present an implementation and an empirical study that show a considerable practical superiority of our random-order enumeration approach over state-of-the-art alternatives.
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