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Open Source Database Special Feature: An Introduction to Berkeley DB XML
Basic concepts, the shell commands, and beyond
By: Selim Mimaroglu
Dec. 20, 2005 11:45 AM
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In this article I am going to introduce you to the latest version of the Berkeley DB XML, version 2.2.8. Berkeley DB XML (BDB XML) is built on top of the well-known Berkeley Database (BDB). BDB XML is an open source, native XML database. Like its ancestor, BDB, it's an embedded database. It provides APIs for the Java, C++, Perl, Python, PHP, and Tcl languages. It supports the popular XML query languages XQuery and XPath 2.0. I will show you how to use BDB XML in two ways. This month I will introduce the BDB XML shell, and next month we will explore using BDB XML with Java. BDB XML has a lot of features, and I will try to cover the most important ones.
Installation
Using dbxml Shell Invoke the shell by typing "dbxml," and type "quit" to terminate the shell at any time. In order to list all available commands, type "help." To obtain detailed information about a command, type help and the command name. For example "help createContainer" will display usage information of the createContainer command.
createContainer Let's create a container called xbench.dbxml. You can, of course, name it anything you want.
dbxml> createContainer xbench.dbxml The user can choose between two storage types: Wholedoc or Node. The default is Node type storage. If you choose Wholedoc storage, the XML files will be stored as they are with all of the white space preserved. Node storage performs better. The BDB XML documentation suggests not using Wholedoc storage for documents bigger than 1MB.
putDocument dbxml> openContainer xbench.dbxml Actually, dbxml shell commands on Windows are case insensitive, so it's possible to write opencontainer instead of openContainer, but I am going to follow the established naming conventions here.
dbxml> putDocument sample_10 C:\dictionary10.xml f The putDocument command takes three arguments: the first argument is the unique identifier of the document, the second argument is file name, and the third is either f or s. I chose the name sample_10 as the unique identification of this XML document. C:\dictionary10.xml is the file name, including the path. Finally, the last argument f states that it's a file. Instead of providing a filename it's possible to provide XML data itself within quotes. There are several examples in the "Introduction to Berkeley DB XML" document, which uses an XML string instead of a file name.
Query
setVerbose No indices are used in this query. The execution time is around 48.5 seconds. Execution time is very high for this query for two reasons: this is not a trivial query, and there are no indices created yet. I will conceptually explain the possible execution plan for this query:
For each $entry as /dictionary/e There are three for loops in this algorithm. At the heart of the three loops there is a very costly substring (contains) operation. Considering that no indices have been created, execution time is pretty good. Creating indices improves the query performance dramatically (see Listings 6-7). (You can find more information about indices in the Indexing section of this article.) Page 1 of 3 next page »
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