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Bridging the semantical gap between relational data and application-level business objects with core data services: invited talk

Published:01 September 2017Publication History

ABSTRACT

Bringing computations close to the data source is one of the key concepts of high-performance database management systems. This specifically holds true for state-of-the-art systems like HyPer, Microsoft SQL Server, or SAP HANA that are making efficient use of modern hardware by exploiting in-memory storage, vector instructions, and sophisticated algorithms for query optimization and execution. To benefit from the capabilities of these systems, it becomes increasingly important for business applications to efficiently push their data-intensive parts to the DBMS. Capturing and communicating the computational intent from the application to the DBMS is often not trivial, as the DBMS is either abstracted away using object-relational mapper interfaces like Hibernate, or as the language mismatch between imperative, object-oriented languages like Java and the declarative, SQL-based query processing makes it difficult for developers to express non-trivial database operations. In this presentation, we discuss how some of these issues can be tackled using the Core Data Services (CDS) framework that is both supported by SAP's HANA data-base and the Netweaver application server stack. By combining concepts from declarative query languages like SQL and XPath with functionality developers are familiar with from object-oriented languages or even aspect-oriented programming (i.e. the "."-operator for member access and the concept of annotations), CDS enables to express complex business logic with only a few lines of code - where equivalent SQL statements span multiple pages instead (see Figure 1 below for an example).

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  1. Bridging the semantical gap between relational data and application-level business objects with core data services: invited talk

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        DBPL '17: Proceedings of The 16th International Symposium on Database Programming Languages
        September 2017
        99 pages
        ISBN:9781450353540
        DOI:10.1145/3122831

        Copyright © 2017 Owner/Author

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        Association for Computing Machinery

        New York, NY, United States

        Publication History

        • Published: 1 September 2017

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        • invited-talk

        Acceptance Rates

        DBPL '17 Paper Acceptance Rate10of15submissions,67%Overall Acceptance Rate10of15submissions,67%
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