Readings in Database Systems

Front Cover
Joseph M. Hellerstein, Michael Stonebraker
MIT Press, 2005 - Computers - 865 pages

The latest edition of a popular text and reference on database research, with substantial new material and revision; covers classical literature and recent hot topics.

Lessons from database research have been applied in academic fields ranging from bioinformatics to next-generation Internet architecture and in industrial uses including Web-based e-commerce and search engines. The core ideas in the field have become increasingly influential. This text provides both students and professionals with a grounding in database research and a technical context for understanding recent innovations in the field. The readings included treat the most important issues in the database area--the basic material for any DBMS professional. This fourth edition has been substantially updated and revised, with 21 of the 48 papers new to the edition, four of them published for the first time. Many of the sections have been newly organized, and each section includes a new or substantially revised introduction that discusses the context, motivation, and controversies in a particular area, placing it in the broader perspective of database research. Two introductory articles, never before published, provide an organized, current introduction to basic knowledge of the field; one discusses the history of data models and query languages and the other offers an architectural overview of a database system. The remaining articles range from the classical literature on database research to treatments of current hot topics, including a paper on search engine architecture and a paper on application servers, both written expressly for this edition. The result is a collection of papers that are seminal and also accessible to a reader who has a basic familiarity with database systems.

 

Contents

Michael Stonebraker and Joseph M Hellerstein
42
Query Processing
96
P Griffiths Selinger M M Astrahan D D Chamberlin R A Lorie and T G Price
115
The Future of High Performance Database Systems
141
Encapsulation of Parallelism in the Volcano Query Processing System
155
Chris Nyberg Tom Barclay Zarka Cvetanovic Jim Gray and Dave Lomet
175
Data Storage and Access Methods
202
Norbert Beckmann HansPeter Kriegel Ralf Schneider and Bernhard Seeger
217
Yihong Zhao Prasad M Deshpande and Jeffrey F Naughton
591
Stefano Ceri and Jennifer Widom
604
A Dynamic View Management System for Data Warehouses
638
Data Mining
650
Introduction 650
668
John Shafer Rakesh Agrawal and Manish Mehta
679
Rakesh Agrawal and Ramakrishnan Srikant
693
Web Services and Data Bases
705

Jim Gray and Goetz Graefe
230
Transaction Management
238
Jim N Gray Raymond A Lorie Gianfranco R Putzolu and Irving L Traiger
274
Alternatives and Implications
288
Rakesh Agrawal Michael J Carey and Miron Livny
334
Lehman and S Bing
355
Mohan Don Haderle Bruce Lindsay Hamid Pirahesh and Peter Schwarz
424
Mohan Bruce Lindsay and R Obermarck
443
Inclusion of New Types In Relational Data Base Systems
459
Hellerstein Jeffrey F Naughton and Avi Pfeffer
478
AutoAdmin Whatif Index Analysis Utility
492
Algorithms for Creating Indexes for Very Large Tables Without Quiescing Updates
516
An Overview of Data Warehousing and OLAP Technology
532
Surajit Chaudhuri and Umeshwar Dayal
542
Patrick ONeil and Dallan Quass
553
Jim Gray Surajit Chaudhuri Adam Bosworth Andrew Layman Don Reichart and Murali Venkatrao
581
A Search Engine Retrospective
711
The Anatomy of a LargeScale Hypertextual Web Search Engine
725
The BINGO System for Information Portal Generation and Expert Web Search
745
Enabling Query Formulation and Optimization in Semistructured Databases 786
756
and Patrick Zimmer
760
Querying SemiStructured Data
768
Serge Abiteboul
793
Roy Goldman and Jennifer Widom
796
Scalable Trigger Processing
814
This
818
Praveen Seshadri Miron Livny and Raghu Ramakrishnan
835
Ron Avnur and Joseph M Hellerstein
848
Sources
862
Mohan and Inderpal Narang
864
Copyright

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About the author (2005)

Joseph M. Hellerstein is Professor, Computer Science Division, at the University of California, Berkeley, and Director, Intel Research Berkeley. Michael Stonebraker is Adjunct Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT.

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