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unit-2 Query processing and optimization,Query equivalence, Join strategies (1)

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unit-2 Query processing and optimization,Query equivalence, Join strategies (1)

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© © All Rights Reserved
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Unit 4: Query Processing

Outcome : Gain Knowledge of steps of query processing and


estimate cost of evaluation of query for different operations.

Overview
Measures of Query Cost
Selection Operation
Sorting
Join Operation
Other Operations
Evaluation of Expressions
Basic Steps in Query Processing

1. Parsing and translation


2. Optimization
3. Evaluation
Basic Steps in Query Processing
(Cont.)
Parsing and translation
translate the query into its internal form. This is
then translated into relational algebra.
Parser checks syntax, verifies relations
Evaluation
The query-execution engine takes a query-
evaluation plan, executes that plan, and returns the
answers to the query.
Basic Steps in Query Processing :
Optimization
A relational algebra expression may have many equivalent
expressions
E.g., σbalance<2500(∏balance(account)) is equivalent to
∏balance(σbalance<2500(account))
Each relational algebra operation can be evaluated using one of
several different algorithms
Correspondingly, a relational-algebra expression can be
evaluated in many ways.
Annotated expression specifying detailed evaluation strategy is
called an evaluation-plan.
E.g., can use an index on balance to find accounts with balance
< 2500,
or can perform complete relation scan and discard accounts with
balance ≥ 2500
Basic Steps: Optimization (Cont.)
Query Optimization: Amongst all equivalent evaluation plans
choose the one with lowest cost.
Cost is estimated using statistical information from the
database catalog
e.g. number of tuples in each relation, size of tuples, etc.
In this chapter we study
How to measure query costs
Algorithms for evaluating relational algebra operations
How to combine algorithms for individual operations in order
to evaluate a complete expression
We study how to optimize queries, that is, how to find an
evaluation plan with lowest estimated cost
Measures of Query Cost
Cost is generally measured as total elapsed time for
answering query
Many factors contribute to time cost
disk accesses, CPU, or even network communication
Typically disk access is the predominant cost, and is also
relatively easy to estimate. Measured by taking into
account
Number of seeks * average-seek-cost
Number of blocks read * average-block-read-cost
Number of blocks written * average-block-write-cost
Cost to write a block is greater than cost to read a block
– data is read back after being written to ensure that
the write was successful
Measures of Query Cost (Cont.)
For simplicity we just use number of block transfers from disk as the
cost measure
We ignore the difference in cost between sequential and random I/O for
simplicity
We also ignore CPU costs for simplicity
Costs depends on the size of the buffer in main memory
Having more memory reduces need for disk access
Amount of real memory available to buffer depends on other concurrent
OS processes, and hard to determine ahead of actual execution
We often use worst case estimates, assuming only the minimum
amount of memory needed for the operation is available
Real systems take CPU cost into account, differentiate between
sequential and random I/O, and take buffer size into account
We do not include cost to writing output to disk in our cost
formulae
Selection Operation
File scan – search algorithms that locate and retrieve records
that fulfill a selection condition.
Algorithm A1 (linear search). Scan each file block and test all
records to see whether they satisfy the selection condition.
Cost estimate (number of disk blocks scanned) = br
br denotes number of blocks containing records from relation r
If selection is on a key attribute, cost = (br /2)
stop on finding record
Linear search can be applied regardless of
selection condition or
ordering of records in the file, or
availability of indices
Selection Operation (Cont.)

A2 (binary search). Applicable if selection is an equality


comparison on the attribute on which file is ordered.
Assume that the blocks of a relation are stored contiguously
Cost estimate (number of disk blocks to be scanned):
log2(br) — cost of locating the first tuple by a binary search
on the blocks
Plus number of blocks containing records that satisfy
selection condition
Selections Using Indices
Index scan – search algorithms that use an index
selection condition must be on search-key of index.
A3 (primary index on candidate key, equality). Retrieve a single record
that satisfies the corresponding equality condition
Cost = HTi + 1
A4 (primary index on nonkey, equality) Retrieve multiple records.
Records will be on consecutive blocks
Cost = HTi + number of blocks containing retrieved records
A5 (equality on search-key of secondary index).
Retrieve a single record if the search-key is a candidate key
Cost = HTi + 1
Retrieve multiple records if search-key is not a candidate key
Cost = HTi + number of records retrieved
– Can be very expensive!
each record may be on a different block
– one block access for each retrieved record
Selections Involving Comparisons
Can implement selections of the form σA≤V (r) or σA ≥ V(r) by using
a linear file scan or binary search,
or by using indices in the following ways:
A6 (primary index, comparison). (Relation is sorted on A)
For σA ≥ V(r) use index to find first tuple ≥ v and scan relation
sequentially from there
For σA≤V (r) just scan relation sequentially till first tuple > v; do not
use index
A7 (secondary index, comparison).
For σA ≥ V(r) use index to find first index entry ≥ v and scan index
sequentially from there, to find pointers to records.
For σA≤V (r) just scan leaf pages of index finding pointers to records,
till first entry > v
In either case, retrieve records that are pointed to
– requires an I/O for each record
– Linear file scan may be cheaper if many records are
to be fetched!
Sorting
We may build an index on the relation, and then use the index to
read the relation in sorted order. May lead to one disk block
access for each tuple.
For relations that fit in memory, techniques like quicksort can be
used. For relations that don’t fit in memory, external
sort-merge is a good choice.
External Sort-
Sort-Merge
Let M denote memory size (in pages).
1. Create sorted runs. Let i be 0 initially.
Repeatedly do the following till the end of the relation:
(a) Read M blocks of relation into memory
(b) Sort the in-memory blocks
(c) Write sorted data to run Ri; increment i.
Let the final value of I be N
2. Merge the runs (N-way merge). We assume (for now) that N < M.
1. Use N blocks of memory to buffer input runs, and 1 block to buffer
output. Read the first block of each run into its buffer page
2. repeat
1. Select the first record (in sort order) among all buffer pages
2. Write the record to the output buffer. If the output buffer is full
write it to disk.
3. Delete the record from its input buffer page.
If the buffer page becomes empty then
read the next block (if any) of the run into the buffer.
3. until all input buffer pages are empty:
External Sort-
Sort-Merge (Cont.)
If i ≥ M, several merge passes are required.
In each pass, contiguous groups of M - 1 runs are
merged.
A pass reduces the number of runs by a factor of M -1,
and creates runs longer by the same factor.
E.g. If M=11, and there are 90 runs, one pass
reduces the number of runs to 9, each 10 times the
size of the initial runs
Repeated passes are performed till all runs have been
merged into one.
Example: External Sorting Using Sort-
Sort-Merge
Join Operation
Several different algorithms to implement joins
Nested-loop join
Block nested-loop join
Indexed nested-loop join
Merge-join
Hash-join
Choice based on cost estimate
Examples use the following information
Number of records of customer: 10,000 depositor: 5000
Number of blocks of customer: 400 depositor: 100
Nested--Loop Join
Nested
To compute the theta join r θs
for each tuple tr in r do begin
for each tuple ts in s do begin
test pair (tr,ts) to see if they satisfy the join condition θ
if they do, add tr • ts to the result.
end
end
r is called the outer relation and s the inner relation of the join.
Requires no indices and can be used with any kind of join
condition.
Expensive since it examines every pair of tuples in the two
relations.
Nested--Loop Join (Cont.)
Nested
In the worst case, if there is enough memory only to hold
one block of each relation, the estimated cost is
nr ∗ bs + br
disk accesses.
If the smaller relation fits entirely in memory, use that as the
inner relation. Reduces cost to br + bs disk accesses.
Assuming worst case memory availability cost estimate is
5000 ∗ 400 + 100 = 2,000,100 disk accesses with depositor as
outer relation, and
1000 ∗ 100 + 400 = 1,000,400 disk accesses with customer as
the outer relation.
If smaller relation (depositor) fits entirely in memory, the cost
estimate will be 500 disk accesses.
Block nested-loops algorithm (next slide) is preferable.
Block Nested-
Nested-Loop Join
Variant of nested-loop join in which every block of inner
relation is paired with every block of outer relation.
for each block Br of r do begin
for each block Bs of s do begin
for each tuple tr in Br do begin
for each tuple ts in Bs do begin
Check if (tr,ts) satisfy the join condition
if they do, add tr • ts to the result.
end
end
end
end
Example of Nested-
Nested-Loop Join Costs
Compute depositor customer, with depositor as the outer
relation.
Let customer have a primary B+-tree index on the join attribute
customer-name, which contains 20 entries in each index node.
Since customer has 10,000 tuples, the height of the tree is 4, and
one more access is needed to find the actual data
depositor has 5000 tuples
Cost of block nested loops join
400*100 + 100 = 40,100 disk accesses assuming worst case
memory (may be significantly less with more memory)
Cost of indexed nested loops join
100 + 5000 * 5 = 25,100 disk accesses.
CPU cost likely to be less than that for block nested loops join
Merge--Join
Merge
1. Sort both relations on their join attribute (if not already sorted on the
join attributes).
2. Merge the sorted relations to join them
1. Join step is similar to the merge stage of the sort-merge algorithm.
2. Main difference is handling of duplicate values in join attribute — every
pair with same value on join attribute must be matched
3. Detailed algorithm in book
Merge--Join (Cont.)
Merge
Can be used only for equi-joins and natural joins
Each block needs to be read only once (assuming all tuples for
any given value of the join attributes fit in memory
Thus number of block accesses for merge-join is
br + bs + the cost of sorting if relations are unsorted.
hybrid merge-join: If one relation is sorted, and the other has a
secondary B+-tree index on the join attribute
Merge the sorted relation with the leaf entries of the B+-tree .
Sort the result on the addresses of the unsorted relation’s tuples
Scan the unsorted relation in physical address order and merge with
previous result, to replace addresses by the actual tuples
Sequential scan more efficient than random lookup
Hash--Join
Hash
Applicable for equi-joins and natural joins.
A hash function h is used to partition tuples of both relations
h maps JoinAttrs values to {0, 1, ..., n}, where JoinAttrs denotes
the common attributes of r and s used in the natural join.
r0, r1, . . ., rn denote partitions of r tuples
Each tuple tr ∈ r is put in partition ri where i = h(tr [JoinAttrs]).
r0,, r1. . ., rn denotes partitions of s tuples
Each tuple ts ∈s is put in partition si, where i = h(ts [JoinAttrs]).

Note: In book, ri is denoted as Hri, si is denoted as Hsi and


n is denoted as nh.
Hash--Join (Cont.)
Hash
Hash--Join (Cont.)
Hash

r tuples in ri need only to be compared with s tuples in si


Need not be compared with s tuples in any other partition,
since:
an r tuple and an s tuple that satisfy the join condition will have
the same value for the join attributes.
If that value is hashed to some value i, the r tuple has to be in ri
and the s tuple in si.
Hash--Join Algorithm
Hash

The hash-join of r and s is computed as follows.


1. Partition the relation s using hashing function h. When
partitioning a relation, one block of memory is reserved as
the output buffer for each partition.
2. Partition r similarly.
3. For each i:
(a) Load si into memory and build an in-memory hash index on it
using the join attribute. This hash index uses a different hash
function than the earlier one h.
(b) Read the tuples in ri from the disk one by one. For each tuple
tr locate each matching tuple ts in si using the in-memory hash
index. Output the concatenation of their attributes.
Relation s is called the build input and
r is called the probe input.
Hash--Join algorithm (Cont.)
Hash
The value n and the hash function h is chosen such that each
si should fit in memory.
Typically n is chosen as bs/M * f where f is a “fudge factor”,
typically around 1.2
The probe relation partitions si need not fit in memory
Recursive partitioning required if number of partitions n is
greater than number of pages M of memory.
instead of partitioning n ways, use M – 1 partitions for s
Further partition the M – 1 partitions using a different hash
function
Use same partitioning method on r
Rarely required: e.g., recursive partitioning not needed for
relations of 1GB or less with memory size of 2MB, with block size
of 4KB.
Example of Cost of Hash-
Hash-Join
customer depositor
Assume that memory size is 20 blocks
bdepositor= 100 and bcustomer = 400.
depositor is to be used as build input. Partition it into five partitions,
each of size 20 blocks. This partitioning can be done in one pass.
Similarly, partition customer into five partitions,each of size 80.
This is also done in one pass.
Therefore total cost: 3(100 + 400) = 1500 block transfers
ignores cost of writing partially filled blocks
Hybrid Hash–
Hash–Join
Useful when memory sized are relatively large, and the build input
is bigger than memory.
Main feature of hybrid hash join:
Keep the first partition of the build relation in memory.
E.g. With memory size of 25 blocks, depositor can be partitioned
into five partitions, each of size 20 blocks.
Division of memory:
The first partition occupies 20 blocks of memory
1 block is used for input, and 1 block each for buffering the other 4
partitions.
customer is similarly partitioned into five partitions each of size 80;
the first is used right away for probing, instead of being written out
and read back.
Cost of 3(80 + 320) + 20 +80 = 1300 block transfers for
hybrid hash join, instead of 1500 with plain hash-join.
Hybrid hash-join most useful if M >> bs
Complex Joins
Join with a conjunctive condition:
r θ1∧ θ 2∧... ∧ θ n s
Either use nested loops/block nested loops, or
Compute the result of one of the simpler joins r θi s
final result comprises those tuples in the intermediate result
that satisfy the remaining conditions
θ1 ∧ . . . ∧ θi –1 ∧ θi +1 ∧ . . . ∧ θn
Join with a disjunctive condition
r θ1 ∨ θ2 ∨... ∨ θn s
Either use nested loops/block nested loops, or
Compute as the union of the records in individual joins r θ i s:
(r θ1 s) ∪ (r θ2 s) ∪ . . . ∪ (r θn s)
Other Operations

Duplicate elimination can be implemented via


hashing or sorting.
On sorting duplicates will come adjacent to each other,
and all but one set of duplicates can be deleted.
Optimization: duplicates can be deleted during run
generation as well as at intermediate merge steps in
external sort-merge.
Hashing is similar – duplicates will come into the same
bucket.
Projection is implemented by performing projection on
each tuple followed by duplicate elimination.
Other Operations : Aggregation
Aggregation can be implemented in a manner similar to
duplicate elimination.
Sorting or hashing can be used to bring tuples in the same
group together, and then the aggregate functions can be
applied on each group.
Optimization: combine tuples in the same group during run
generation and intermediate merges, by computing partial
aggregate values
For count, min, max, sum: keep aggregate values on
tuples found so far in the group.
– When combining partial aggregate for count, add up
the aggregates
For avg, keep sum and count, and divide sum by count at
the end
Other Operations : Set Operations
Set operations (∪, ∩ and ): can either use variant of
merge-join after sorting, or variant of hash-join.
E.g., Set operations using hashing:
1. Partition both relations using the same hash function, thereby
creating, r1, .., rn r0, and s1, s2.., sn
2. Process each partition i as follows. Using a different hashing
function, build an in-memory hash index on ri after it is brought
into memory.
3. – r ∪ s: Add tuples in si to the hash index if they are not already
in it. At end of si add the tuples in the hash index to the result.
– r ∩ s: output tuples in si to the result if they are already there in
the hash index.
– r – s: for each tuple in si, if it is there in the hash index, delete it
from the index. At end of si add remaining tuples in the hash
index to the result.
Evaluation of Expressions

Alternatives for evaluating an entire expression tree


are:
Materialization: generate results of an expression
whose inputs are relations or are already
computed, materialize (store) it on disk. Repeat.

Pipelining: Pass on tuples to parent operations


even as an operation is being executed.
Complex Joins
Join involving three relations: loan depositor customer
Strategy 1. Compute depositor customer; use result to
compute loan (depositor customer)
Strategy 2. Computer loan depositor first, and then join
the result with customer.
Strategy 3. Perform the pair of joins at once. Build and
index on loan for loan-number, and on customer for
customer-name.
For each tuple t in depositor, look up the corresponding tuples
in customer and the corresponding tuples in loan.
Each tuple of deposit is examined exactly once.
Strategy 3 combines two operations into one special-
purpose operation that is more efficient than implementing
two joins of two relations.
Pipelining
Pipelined evaluation : evaluate several operations
simultaneously, passing the results of one operation on to the next.
E.g., in previous expression tree, don’t store result of

σ balance < 2500 (account )


instead, pass tuples directly to the join.. Similarly, don’t store result of
join, pass tuples directly to projection.
Much cheaper than materialization: no need to store a temporary
relation to disk.
Pipelining may not always be possible – e.g., sort, hash-join.
For pipelining to be effective, use evaluation algorithms that
generate output tuples even as tuples are received for inputs to the
operation.
Pipelines can be executed in two ways: demand driven and
producer driven
Materialization
Materialized evaluation: evaluate one operation at a
time, starting at the lowest-level. Use intermediate
results materialized into temporary relations to evaluate
next-level operations.
E.g., in figure below, compute and store
σ balance< 2500 (account )
then compute the store its join with customer, and finally
compute the projections on customer-name.
Materialization (Cont.)
Materialized evaluation is always applicable
Cost of writing results to disk and reading them back can be
quite high
Our cost formulas for operations ignore cost of writing results
to disk, so
Overall cost = Sum of costs of individual operations +
cost of writing intermediate results to disk.

Double buffering: use two output buffers for each operation,


when one is full write it to disk while the other is getting filled
Allows overlap of disk writes with computation and reduces
execution time

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