Middle-tier database caching for e-business
Qiong Luo, Sailesh Krishnamurthy, et al.
SIGMOD 2002
Much recent work has focused on the bottom-up evaluation of Datalog programs [Bancilhon and Ramakrishnan 1988]. One approach, called magic-sets, is based on rewriting a logic program so that bottom-up fixpoint evaluation of the program avoids generation of irrelevant facts [Bancilhon et al. 1986; Beeri and Ramakrishnan 1987; Ramakrishnan 1991]. It was widely believed for some time that the principal application of the magic-sets technique is to restrict computation in recursive queries using equijoin predicates. We extend the magic-sets transformation to use predicates other than equality (X > 10, for example) in restricting computation. The resulting ground magic-sets transformation is an important step in developing an extended magic-sets transformation that has practical utility in "real" relational databases, not only for recursive queries, but for nonrecursive queries as well [Mumick et al. 1990b; Mumick 1991].
Qiong Luo, Sailesh Krishnamurthy, et al.
SIGMOD 2002
I.S. Mumick, S. Finkelstein, et al.
SIGMOD Record
Kevin Beyer, Roberta Cochrane, et al.
IBM Systems Journal
Kevin Beyer, Don Chamberlin, et al.
SIGMOD 2005