Oracle® Spatial Resource Description Framework (RDF) 10g Release 2 (10.2) Part Number B19307-03 |
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This chapter describes the support for the Resource Description Framework (RDF) in the Oracle Spatial network data model. It assumes that you are familiar with the major concepts associated with RDF, such as reification, containers, and collections. This chapter does not explain these concepts in detail, but focuses instead on how the concepts are implemented in the network data model. For an excellent explanation of RDF concepts, see the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) RDF Primer at http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-primer/
.
It is also helpful is you are familiar with the concepts and techniques of the network data model, as described in Oracle Spatial Topology and Network Data Models.
The PL/SQL subprograms for working with RDF are in the SDO_RDF package, which is documented in Chapter 2, and in the SDO_RDF_INFERENCE package, which is documented in Chapter 3.
This chapter contains the following major sections:
RDF is a language used to describe metadata, particularly for information found on the Web. In addition to its formal semantics, RDF has a simple data structure that is effectively modeled using a directed graph. To describe metadata in the network data model implementation of RDF, the metadata statements are represented as triples: nodes are used to represent two parts of the triple, and the third part is represented by a directed link that describes the relationship between the nodes. The triples are stored in a logical network. In addition, Spatial maintains information about different RDF models.
RDF statements are expressed in triples: {subject or resource, predicate or property, object or value}. In this chapter {subject, property, object} is used to describe a triple, and the terms statement and triple may sometimes be used interchangeably. Each triple is a complete and unique fact about a specific domain, and can be represented by a link in a directed graph.
In additional to logical network information, spatial information such as node locations and link geometries can be associated with the network.
There is one universe for all RDF data stored in the database. All RDF triples are parsed and stored in the system as entries in tables under the MDSYS schema. An RDF triple {subject, property, object} is treated as one database object. As a result, a single RDF document containing multiple triples results in multiple database objects.
All the subjects and objects of triples are mapped to nodes in a network, and properties are mapped to network links that have their start node and end node as subject and object, respectively. The possible node types in an RDF network are blank nodes, URIs, plain literals, and typed literals. Oracle Database has a type named URIType to hold instances of any URI (HttpUri, DBUri, and XDBUri). This type is used to store the names of the nodes and links in the RDF network.
The following RDF requirements apply to the specifications of URIs and the storage of RDF data in the database:
A subject must be a URI or a blank node.
A property must be a URI.
An object can be any type, such as a URI, a blank node, or a literal. (However, null values and null strings are not supported.)
The MDSYS.RDF_MODEL$ system table contains information about all RDF models defined in the database. When you create a model using the SDO_RDF.CREATE_RDF_MODEL procedure, you specify a name for the model, as well as a table and column to hold references to the RDF data, and the system automatically generates a model ID.
Oracle maintains the MDSYS.RDF_MODEL$ table automatically when you create and drop RDF models. Users should never modify this table directly. For example, do not use SQL INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statements with this table.
The MDSYS.RDF_MODEL$ table contains the columns shown in Table 1-1.
Table 1-1 MDSYS.RDF_MODEL$ Table Columns
Column Name | Data Type | Description |
---|---|---|
OWNER |
VARCHAR2(30) |
Schema of the owner of the RDF model. |
MODEL_ID |
NUMBER |
Unique model ID number, automatically generated by Spatial. |
MODEL_NAME |
VARCHAR2(25) |
Name of the model. |
TABLE_NAME |
VARCHAR2(32) |
Name of the table to hold references to RDF data for the model. |
COLUMN_NAME |
VARCHAR2(32) |
Name of the column of type SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S in the table to hold references to RDF data for the model. |
When you create an RDF model, a view for the RDF triples associated with the model is also created under the MDSYS schema. This view has a name in the format RDFM_model-name, and it is visible only to the owner of the model and to users with suitable privileges. Each MDSYS.RDFM_model-name view contains a row for each triple (stored as a link in a network), and it has the columns shown in Table 1-2.
Table 1-2 MDSYS.RDFM_model-name View Columns
Column Name | Data Type | Description |
---|---|---|
LINK_ID |
NUMBER |
The unique triple identifier and part of the primary key |
START_NODE_ID |
NUMBER |
The VALUE_ID for the text value of the subject of the triple. Also part of the primary key. |
END_NODE_ID |
NUMBER |
The VALUE_ID for the text value of the object of the triple |
CANON_END_NODE_ID |
NUMBER |
The VALUE_ID for the text value of the canonical form of the object of the triple. Also part of the primary key. |
LINK_TYPE |
VARCHAR2(200) |
The type of predicate represented by the URI of the P_VALUE_ID. |
ACTIVE |
VARCHAR2(1) |
The status of the link in the network: contains |
LINK_LEVEL |
NUMBER |
Priority level for the link; used for hierarchical modeling, so that links with higher priority levels can be considered first in computing a path. |
COST |
NUMBER |
The number of times the triple is stored in an application table. The triple is only stored once in an RDF system table, but may exist in several rows in a user's application table. |
PARENT_LINK_ID |
NUMBER |
Link ID of the parent link of this link |
BIDIRECTED |
VARCHAR2(1) |
Contains |
P_VALUE_ID |
NUMBER |
The VALUE_ID for the text value of the predicate of the triple |
CONTEXT |
VARCHAR2(1) |
Reserved for future use; currently |
REIF_LINK |
VARCHAR2(1) |
Reserved for future use; currently |
MODEL_ID |
NUMBER |
The ID for the RDF graph to which the triple belongs. It logically partitions the table by RDF graphs. |
The MDSYS.RDF_NAMESPACE$ system table contains information about namespaces. Namespaces are used in RDF XML documents to make the documents more readable. In the Oracle RDF data model, namespaces are stored directly with their subjects, properties, and objects. However, Oracle does not use the MDSYS.RDF_NAMESPACE$ table in any of its internal operations; the table is provided as a convenience to users who may want to store namespaces that are used in their models.
Oracle adds to the MDSYS.RDF_NAMESPACE$ table automatically when you add namespaces using the SDO_RDF.ADD_NAMESPACES procedure. Do not use SQL INSERT statements to add namespaces this table.
The MDSYS.RDF_NAMESPACE$ table contains the columns shown in Table 1-3.
The MDSYS.RDF_VALUE$ system table contains information about the subjects, properties, and objects used to represent RDF statements. It uniquely stores the text values (URIs or literals) for these three pieces of information, using a separate row for each part of each triple.
Oracle maintains the MDSYS.RDF_VALUE$ table automatically. Users should never modify this table directly. For example, do not use SQL INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statements with this table.
The RDF_VALUE$ table contains the columns shown in Table 1-4.
Table 1-4 MDSYS.RDF_VALUE$ Table Columns
Column Name | Data Type | Description |
---|---|---|
VALUE_ID |
NUMBER |
Unique value ID number, automatically generated by Spatial. |
VALUE_NAME |
SYS.URITYPE |
Text value for one part of the triple, if the length is 4000 characters or less. (Otherwise, the text is stored in the LONG_VALUE column.) |
VALUE_TYPE |
VARCHAR2(10) |
The type of text information stored in the VALUE_NAME column. Possible values: |
LITERAL_TYPE |
VARCHAR2(4000) |
For typed literals, the type information; otherwise, null. For example, for a row representing a creation date of 1999-08-16, the VALUE_TYPE column can contain |
LANGUAGE_TYPE |
VARCHAR2(80) |
Language tag (for example, |
LONG_VALUE |
CLOB |
The character string if the length of the part of the triple is greater than 4000 characters. Otherwise, this column has a null value. |
Duplicate triples are not stored in the database. To check if a triple is a duplicate of an existing triple, the subject, property, and object of the incoming triple are checked against triple values in the specified model. If the incoming subject, property, and object are all URIs, an exact match of their values determines a duplicate. However, if the object of incoming triple is a literal, an exact match of the subject and property, and a value (canonical) match of the object, determine a duplicate. For example, the following two triples are duplicates:
<eg:a> <eg:b> "123"^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#int <eg:a> <eg:b> "123"^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#unsignedByte
The second triple is treated as a duplicate of the first, because "123"^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#int
has an equivalent value (is canonically equivalent) to "123"^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#unsignedByte
. Two entities are canonically equivalent if they can be reduced to the same value.
To use a non-RDF example, A*(B-C)
, A*B-C*A
, (B-C)*A
, and -A*C+A*B
all convert into the same canonical form.
Value-based matching of lexical forms is supported for the following data types:
STRING: plain literal, xsd:string and some of its XML Schema subtypes
NUMERIC: xsd:decimal and its XML Schema subtypes, xsd:float, and xsd:double. (Support is not provided for float/double INF, -INF, and NaN values.)
DATETIME: xsd:datetime, but no support for timezone. (Even without timezone there are still multiple representations for a single value, for example, "2004-02-18 T15:12:54"
and "2004-02-18 T15:12:54.0000"
.)
DATE: xsd:date, but no support for timezone. (In this case, because timezone is not supported, all valid lexical representations are already canonical, so these can be treated like the OTHER case in the next item.)
OTHER: Everything else. (No attempt is made to match different representations).
The following namespace definition is used: xmlns:xsd=Óhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchemaÓ
The first occurrence of a literal in the RDF_VALUE$ table is taken as the canonical form and given the VALUE_TYPE value of CPL
, CPL@
, CTL
, CPLL
, CPLL@
, or CTLL
as appropriate; that is, a C
for canonical is prefixed to the actual value type. If a literal with the same canonical form (but a different lexical representation) as a previously inserted literal is inserted into the RDF_VALUE$ table, the VALUE_TYPE value assigned to the new insert is PL
, PL@
, TL
, PLL
, PLL@
, or TLL
as appropriate.
Canonically equivalent text values having different lexical representations are thus stored in the RDF_VALUE$ table; however, canonically equivalent triples are not stored in the database.
RDF subjects and objects are mapped to nodes in the network data model. Subject nodes are the start nodes of links, and object nodes are the end nodes of links. Non-literal nodes (that is, URIs and blank nodes) can be used as both subject and object nodes. Literals can be used only as object nodes.
RDF triples may have unknown subject nodes and unknown object nodes. Blank nodes are used to represent these unknown nodes. Blank nodes are also used when the relationship between a subject node and an object node is n-ary (as is the case with containers). A new entry is made for each blank node encountered in a triple.
By default, no two blank nodes corresponding to two different objects will be mapped to the same network node; however, you can optionally reuse a specific blank node. To reuse a blank node, you must use the blank node constructor (described in Section 1.4.2) to input the RDF triple. The blank node constructor is required for inserting containers (see Section 1.2.8) and collections (see Section 1.2.9).
RDF properties are mapped to links that have their start node and end node as RDF subjects and objects, respectively. Therefore, a link represents a complete RDF triple.
When a triple is inserted into an RDF model, the subject, property, and object text values are checked to see if they already exist in the database. If they already exist (due to previous statements in other models), no new entries are made; if they do not exist, three new rows are inserted into the RDF_VALUE$ table (described in Section 1.2.3).
Reification of an RDF statement is a means of providing metadata for that statement; it is the action that enables the statement to be used as the subject or object in another RDF statement.
Consider a plain English example in which the statement PersonA is a good job candidate is reified. Assume that the following statements are then made, using the reified statement as the object:
PersonB says that PersonA is a good job candidate.
PersonC denies that PersonA is a good job candidate.
For PersonB and PersonC to be able to make such statements, a reification quad for the statement PersonA is a good job candidate must exist in the database, in a form such as the following:
<a:Stmt1, rdf:type, rdf:Statement> <a:Stmt1, rdf:subject, a:PersonA> <a:Stmt1, rdf:predicate, a:CandidateQuality> <a:Stmt1, rdf:object, "Good">
(In the preceding statements, a:
represents a namespace.)
PersonB and PersonC can then make their statements about PersonA, in forms like the following:
<a:PersonB, a:Says, a:Stmt1> <a:PersonC, a:Denies, a:Stmt1>
You can use the SDO_RDF.IS_REIFIED_QUAD function to see if a reified quad for a statement exists in the database. Using the preceding example, the following query:
SELECT SDO_RDF.IS_REIFIED_QUAD('candidates', 'a:PersonA', 'a:CandidateQuality', 'Good') FROM DUAL;
returns the following result:
<a:Stmt1> <rdf:type> <rdf:Statement>
In the current release, you cannot reify statements. However, if your data includes reified statements, the RDF model stores the reification quads.
A container is a resource that contains things. The contained things are called members. The members of a container may be resources (including blank nodes) or literals. RDF defines three types of containers, which are explained in the World Wide Web Consortium RDF Primer as follows:
A Bag (a resource having type rdf:Bag) represents a group of resources or literals, possibly including duplicate members, where there is no significance in the order of the members.
A Sequence or Seq (a resource having type rdf:Seq) represents a group of resources or literals, possibly including duplicate members, where the order of the members is significant.
An Alternative or Alt (a resource having type rdf:Alt) represents a group of resources or literals that are alternatives (typically for a single value of a property). For example, an Alt might be used to describe alternative language translations for the title of a book, or to describe a list of alternative Internet sites at which a resource might be found. An application using a property whose value is an Alt container should be aware that it can choose any one of the members of the group as appropriate.
In the Oracle RDF data model, containers follow the general rules for triple insertion. A blank node is first created with a VALUE_NAME in the following format:
'_:ORABNNode_id'. Triple {_:ORABNNode_id, rdf:type, containerType}
Triples {_:ORABN
Node_id
, rdf:_member#, containerValue}
are then inserted for each container. As with other triples, the containerValue object will be reused if this node already exists in the database. The links for container members have their LINK_TYPE set to RDF_MEMBER
.
In the Oracle RDF data model, collections are handled similarly to containers, except an additional constraint is enforced. A blank node is first created with a VALUE_NAME in the following format:
'_:ORABNNode_id'. Triple {_:ORABNNode_id, rdf:type, rdf:List}
Triples {_:ORABN
Node_id
, rdf:_member#, listValue}
are then inserted for each collection. As with other triples, the listValue
object will be reused if this node already exists in the database. Because collections are closed, a constraint is enforced such that no new members can be added to the list. The links for collection members have their LINK_TYPE set to RDF_MEMBER
.
A rule is an object that can be applied to draw inferences from RDF data. A rule is identified by a name and consists of:
An IF side pattern for the antecedents
An optional filter condition that further restricts the subgraphs matched by the IF side pattern
A THEN side pattern for the consequents
For example, the rule that a chairperson of a conference is also a reviewer of the conference could be represented as follows:
('chairpersonRule', -- rule name '(?r :ChairPersonOf ?c)', -- IF side pattern NULL, -- filter condition '(?r :ReviewerOf ?c)', -- THEN side pattern SDO_RDF_Aliases (MDSYS.RDF_Alias('', 'http://some.org/test/')) )
In this case, the rule does not have a filter condition, so that component of the representation is NULL. Note that a THEN side pattern with more than one triple can be used to infer multiple triples for each IF side match.
A rulebase is an object that contains rules. Two Oracle-supplied rulebases are provided:
RDFS
RDF (a subset of RDFS)
The RDFS and RDF rulebases are created when you call the SDO_RDF.CREATE_RDF_NETWORK procedure to add RDF support to the database. The RDFS rulebase implements the RDFS entailment rules, as described in the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) RDF Semantics document at http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-mt/
. The RDF rulebase represents the RDF entailment rules, which are a subset of the RDFS entailment rules. You can see the contents of these rulebases by examining the MDSYS.RDFR_RDFS and MDSYS.RDFR_RDF views.
You can also create user-defined rulebases using the SDO_RDF_INFERENCE.CREATE_RULEBASE procedure. User-defined rulebases enable you to provide additional specialized inferencing capabilities.
For each rulebase, a system table is created to hold rules in the rulebase, along with a system view with a name in the format MDSYS.RDFR_rulebase-name (for example, MDSYS.RDFR_FAMILY_RB for a rulebase named FAMILY_RB
). You must use this view to insert, delete, and modify rules in the rulebase. Each MDSYS.RDFR_rulebase-name view has the columns shown in Table 1-5.
Table 1-5 MDSYS.RDFR_rulebase-name View Columns
Column Name | Data Type | Description |
---|---|---|
RULE_NAME |
VARCHAR2(30) |
Name of the rule |
ANTECEDENTS |
VARCHAR2(4000) |
IF side pattern for the antecedents |
FILTER |
VARCHAR2(4000) |
Filter condition that further restricts the subgraphs matched by the IF side pattern. Null indicates no filter condition is to be applied |
CONSEQUENTS |
VARCHAR2(4000) |
THEN side pattern for the consequents |
ALIASES |
SDO_RDF_ALIASES |
One or more namespaces to be used. (The SDO_RDF_ALIASES data type is described in Section 1.5.) |
Information about all rulebases is maintained in the MDSYS.RDF_RULEBASE_INFO view, which has the columns shown in Table 1-6 and one row for each rulebase.
Table 1-6 MDSYS.RDF_RULEBASE_INFO View Columns
Column Name | Data Type | Description |
---|---|---|
OWNER |
VARCHAR2(30) |
Owner of the rulebase |
RULEBASE_NAME |
VARCHAR2(25) |
Name of the rulebase |
RULEBASE_VIEW_NAME |
VARCHAR2(30) |
Name of the view that you must use for any SQL statements that insert, delete, or modify rules in the rulebase |
STATUS |
VARCHAR2(30) |
Contains |
Example 1-1 creates a rulebase named family_rb
, and then inserts a rule named grandparent_rule
into the family_rb
rulebase. This rule says that if a person is the parent of a child who is the parent of a child, that person is a grandparent of (that is, has the grandParentOf
relationship with respect to) his or her child's child. It also specifies a namespace to be used. (This example is an excerpt from Example 1-9 in Section 1.8.2.)
Example 1-1 Inserting a Rule into a Rulebase
EXECUTE SDO_RDF_INFERENCE.CREATE_RULEBASE('family_rb'); INSERT INTO mdsys.rdfr_family_rb VALUES( 'grandparent_rule', '(?x :parentOf ?y) (?y :parentOf ?z)', NULL, '(?x :grandParentOf ?z)', SDO_RDF_Aliases(SDO_RDF_Alias('','http://www.example.org/family/')));
You can specify one or more rulebases when calling the SDO_RDF_MATCH table function (described in Section 1.5), to control the behavior of queries against RDF data. Example 1-2 refers to the family_rb
rulebase and to the grandParentOf
relationship created in Example 1-1, to find all grandfathers (grandparents who are male) and their grandchildren. (This example is an excerpt from Example 1-9 in Section 1.8.2.)
Example 1-2 Using Rulebases for Inferencing
-- Select all grandfathers and their grandchildren from the family model. -- Use inferencing from both the RDFS and family_rb rulebases. SELECT x, y FROM TABLE(SDO_RDF_MATCH( '(?x :grandParentOf ?y) (?x rdf:type :Male)', SDO_RDF_Models('family'), SDO_RDF_Rulebases('RDFS','family_rb'), SDO_RDF_Aliases(SDO_RDF_Alias('','http://www.example.org/family/')), null));
A rules index is an object containing precomputed triples that can be inferred from applying a specified set of rulebases to a specified set of models. If an SDO_RDF_MATCH query refers to any rulebases, a rules index must exist for each rulebase-model combination in the query.
To create a rules index, use the SDO_RDF_INFERENCE.CREATE_RULES_INDEX procedure. To drop (delete) a rules index, use the SDO_RDF_INFERENCE.DROP_RULES_INDEX procedure.
When you create a rules index, a view for the RDF triples associated with the rules index is also created under the MDSYS schema. This view has a name in the format RDFI_rules-index-name, and it is visible only to the owner of the rules index and to users with suitable privileges. Each MDSYS.RDFI_rules-index-name view contains a row for each triple (stored as a link in a network), and it has the same columns as the RDFM_model-name view, which is described in Table 1-2 in Section 1.2.1.
Information about all rules indexes is maintained in the MDSYS.RDF_RULES_INDEX_INFO view, which has the columns shown in Table 1-7 and one row for each rules index.
Table 1-7 MDSYS.RDF_RULES_INDEX_INFO View Columns
Column Name | Data Type | Description |
---|---|---|
OWNER |
VARCHAR2(30) |
Owner of the rules index |
INDEX_NAME |
VARCHAR2(25) |
Name of the rules index |
INDEX_VIEW_NAME |
VARCHAR2(30) |
Name of the view that you must use for any SQL statements that insert, delete, or modify rules in the rules index |
STATUS |
VARCHAR2(30) |
Contains |
MODEL_COUNT |
NUMBER |
Number of RDF models included in the rules index |
RULEBASE_COUNT |
NUMBER |
Number of rulebases included in the rules index |
Information about all database objects, such as models and rulebases, related to rules indexes is maintained in the MDSYS.RDF_RULES_INDEX_DATASETS view. This view has the columns shown in Table 1-8 and one row for each unique combination of values of all the columns.
Table 1-8 MDSYS.RDF_RULES_INDEX_DATASETS View Columns
Column Name | Data Type | Description |
---|---|---|
INDEX_NAME |
VARCHAR2(25) |
Name of the rules index |
DATA_TYPE |
VARCHAR2(8) |
Type of data included in the rules index. Examples: |
DATA_NAME |
VARCHAR2(25) |
Name of the object of the type in the DATA_TYPE column |
Example 1-3 creates a a rules index named family_rb_rix_family
, using the family
model and the RDFS
and family_rb
rulebases. (This example is an excerpt from Example 1-9 in Section 1.8.2.)
The following database security considerations apply to the use of RDF:
When a model or rules index is created, the owner gets the SELECT privilege with the GRANT option on the associated view. Users that have the SELECT privilege on these views can perform SDO_RDF_MATCH queries against the associated model or rules index.
When a rulebase is created, the owner gets the SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE privileges on the rulebase, with the GRANT option. Users that have the SELECT privilege on a rulebase can create a rules index that includes the rulebase. The INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE privileges control which users can modify the rulebase and how they can modify it.
To perform data manipulation language (DML) operations on a model, a user must have DML privileges for the corresponding base table.
The creator of the base table corresponding to a model can grant privileges to other users.
To perform data manipulation language (DML) operations on a rulebase, a user must have the appropriate privileges on the corresponding database view.
The creator of a model can grant SELECT privileges on the corresponding database view to other users.
A user can query only those models for which that user has SELECT privileges to the corresponding database views.
Only the creator of a model or a rulebase can drop it.
The Spatial network data model maintains several tables and views in the MDSYS schema to hold RDF-related metadata. (Some of these tables and views are created by the SDO_RDF.CREATE_RDF_NETWORK procedure, as explained in Section 1.7, and some are created only as needed.) Table 1-9 lists the tables and views in alphabetical order. (In addition, several tables and views are created for Oracle internal use, and these are accessible only by users with DBA privileges.)
Table 1-9 RDF Metadata Tables and Views
Name | Contains Information About | Described In |
---|---|---|
RDF_MODEL$ |
All RDF models defined in the database |
|
RDFM_model-name |
Triples in the specified model |
|
RDF_NAMESPACE$ |
Namespaces that can be used in RDF XML documents |
|
RDF_RULEBASE_INFO |
Rulebases |
|
RDF_RULES_INDEX_DATASETS |
Database objects used in rules indexes |
|
RDF_RULES_INDEX_INFO |
Rules indexes |
|
RDF_VALUE$ |
Subjects, properties, and objects used to represent RDF statements |
|
RDFR_rulebase-name |
Rules in the specified rulebase |
|
RDFI_rules-index-name |
Triples in the specified rules index |
|
The SDO_RDF_TRIPLE object type represents RDF data in triple format, and the SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S object type (the _S for storage) stores persistent RDF data in the database. The SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S type has references to the data, because the actual RDF data is stored only in the central RDF schema. This type has methods to retrieve the entire triple or part of the triple.
The SDO_RDF_TRIPLE type is used to display RDF triples, whereas the SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S type is used to store the RDF triples in database tables.
The SDO_RDF_TRIPLE object type has the following attributes:
SDO_RDF_TRIPLE ( subject VARCHAR2(4000), property VARCHAR2(4000), object VARCHAR2(10000))
The SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S object type has the following attributes:
SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S ( RDF_T_ID NUMBER, -- RDF triple ID (link ID) RDF_M_ID NUMBER, -- RDF model ID RDF_S_ID NUMBER, -- Subject value ID RDF_P_ID NUMBER, -- Property value ID RDF_O_ID NUMBER) -- Object value ID
Two of the ID values stored in the SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S type (RDF_T_ID and RDF_M_ID) together uniquely identify an RDF statement in the database.
The SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S type has the following methods that retrieve a triple or a part (subject, property, or object) of a triple:
GET_TRIPLE() RETURNS SDO_RDF_TRIPLE GET_SUBJECT() RETURNS VARCHAR2 GET_PROPERTY() RETURNS VARCHAR2 GET_OBJECT() RETURNS CLOB
Example 1-4 shows the SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S methods.
Example 1-4 SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S Methods
SELECT a.triple.GET_TRIPLE() AS triple FROM articles_rdf_data a WHERE a.id = 1; TRIPLE(SUBJECT, PROPERTY, OBJECT) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SDO_RDF_TRIPLE('http://www.nature.com/nature/Article1', 'http://purl.org/dc/elem ents/1.1/title', 'All about XYZ') SELECT a.triple.GET_SUBJECT() AS subject FROM articles_rdf_data a WHERE a.id = 1; SUBJECT -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.nature.com/nature/Article1 SELECT a.triple.GET_PROPERTY() AS property FROM articles_rdf_data a WHERE a.id = 1; PROPERTY -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/title SELECT a.triple.GET_OBJECT() AS object FROM articles_rdf_data a WHERE a.id = 1; OBJECT -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- All about XYZ
The following constructor formats are available for inserting triples into an RDF model table. The only difference is that in the second format the data type for the object is CLOB, to accommodate very long literals.
SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S ( model_name VARCHAR2, -- Model name subject VARCHAR2, -- Subject property VARCHAR2, -- Property object VARCHAR2) -- Object RETURN SELF; SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S ( model_name VARCHAR2, -- Model name subject VARCHAR2, -- Subject property VARCHAR2, -- Property object CLOB) -- Object RETURN SELF;
Example 1-5 uses the first constructor format to insert a triple.
The following constructor formats are available for inserting triples referring to blank nodes into an RDF model table. The only difference is that in the second format the data type for the fourth attribute is CLOB, to accommodate very long literals.
SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S ( model_name VARCHAR2, -- Model name sub_or_bn VARCHAR2, -- Subject or blank node property VARCHAR2, -- Property obj_or_bn VARCHAR2, -- Object or blank node bn_m_id NUMBER) -- ID of the model from which to reuse the blank node RETURN SELF; SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S ( model_name VARCHAR2, -- Model name sub_or_bn VARCHAR2, -- Subject or blank node property VARCHAR2, -- Property object CLOB, -- Object bn_m_id NUMBER) -- ID of the model from which to reuse the blank node RETURN SELF;
Example 1-6 uses the first constructor format to insert a triple that reuses a blank node for the subject.
To query RDF data, use the SDO_RDF_MATCH table function. This function has the following attributes:
SDO_RDF_MATCH( query VARCHAR2, models SDO_RDF_MODELS, rulebases SDO_RDF_RULEBASES, aliases SDO_RDF_ALIASES, filter VARCHAR2, index_status VARCHAR2 ) RETURN ANYDATASET;
The query
attribute is required. The other attributes are optional (that is, each can be a null value).
The query
attribute is a string literal (or concatenation of string literals) with one or more triple patterns, usually containing variables. (The query
attribute cannot be a bind variable or an expression involving a bind variable.) A triple pattern is a triple of atoms enclosed in parentheses. Each atom can be a variable (for example, ?x
), a qualified name (for example, rdf:type
) that is expanded based on the default namespaces and the value of the aliases attribute, or a full URI (for example, <http://www.example.org/family/Male>
). In addition, the third atom can be a numeric literal (for example, 3.14
), a plain literal (for example, "Herman"
), a language-tagged plain literal (for example, "Herman"@en
), or a typed literal (for example, "123"^^xsd:int
).
For example, the following query
attribute specifies three triple patterns to find grandfathers (that is, grandparents who are also male) and the height of each of their grandchildren:
'(?x :grandParentOf ?y) (?x rdf:type :Male) (?y :height ?h)'
The models
attribute identifies the RDF model or models to use. Its data type is SDO_RDF_MODELS, which has the following definition: TABLE OF VARCHAR2(25)
The rulebases
attribute identifies one or more rulebases whose rules are to be applied to the query. Its data type is SDO_RDF_RULEBASES, which has the following definition: TABLE OF VARCHAR2(25)
The aliases
attribute identifies one or more namespaces, in addition to the default namespaces, to be used for expansion of qualified names in the query pattern. Its data type is SDO_RDF_ALIASES, which has the following definition: TABLE OF RDF_ALIAS
, where each RDF_ALIAS element identifies a namespace ID and namespace value. The RDF_ALIAS data type has the following definition: (namespace_id VARCHAR2(30), namespace_val VARCHAR2(4000))
The following default namespaces (namespace_id
and namespace_val
attributes) are used by the SDO_RDF_MATCH table function:
('rdf', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#') ('rdfs', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#') ('xsd', 'http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#')
You can override any of these defaults by specifying the namespace_id
value and a different namespace_val
value in the aliases
attribute.
The filter
attribute identifies any additional selection criteria. If this attribute is not null, it should be a string in the form of a WHERE
clause without the WHERE
keyword. For example: '(h >= 6)'
to limit the result to cases where the height of the grandfather's grandchild is 6 or greater (using the example of triple patterns earlier in this section).
The index_status
attribute lets you query RDF data even when the relevant rules index does not have a valid status. If this attribute is null, the query returns an error if the rules index does not have a valid status. If this attribute is not null, it must be the string INCOMPLETE
or INVALID
. For an explanation of query behavior with different index_status
values, see Section 1.5.1.
The SDO_RDF_MATCH table function returns an object of type ANYDATASET, with elements that depend on the input variables. In the following explanations, var represents the name of a variable used in the query:
For each variable var that may be a literal (that is, for each variable that appears only in the object position in the query pattern), the result elements have five attributes: var, var$RDFVTYP, var$RDFCLOB, var$RDFLTYP, and var$RDFLANG.
For each variable var that cannot take a literal value, the result elements have two attributes: var and var$RDFVTYP.
In both cases, var has the lexical value bound to the variable, var$RDFVTYP indicates the type of value bound to the variable (URI
, LIT
[literal], or BLN
[blank node]), var$RDFCLOB has the lexical value bound to the variable if the value is a long literal, var$RDFLTYP indicates the type of literal bound if a literal is bound, and var$RDFLANG has the language tag of the bound literal if a literal with language tag is bound. var$RDFCLOB is of type CLOB, while all other attributes are of type VARCHAR2.
Example 1-7 selects all grandfathers (grandparents who are male) and their grandchildren from the family
RDF model, using inferencing from both the RDFS
and family_rb
rulebases. (This example is an excerpt from Example 1-9 in Section 1.8.2.)
Example 1-7 SDO_RDF_MATCH Table Function
SELECT x, y FROM TABLE(SDO_RDF_MATCH( '(?x :grandParentOf ?y) (?x rdf:type :Male)', SDO_RDF_Models('family'), SDO_RDF_Rulebases('RDFS','family_rb'), SDO_RDF_Aliases(SDO_RDF_Alias('','http://www.example.org/family/')), null));
You can query RDF data even when the relevant rules index does not have a valid status if you specify the string value INCOMPLETE
or INVALID
for the index_status
attribute of the SDO_RDF_MATCH table function. (The rules index status is stored in the STATUS column of the MDSYS.RDF_RULES_INDEX_INFO view, which is described in Section 1.2.11. The SDO_RDF_MATCH table function is described inSection 1.5.)
The index_status attribute value affects the query behavior as follows:
If the rules index has a valid status, the query behavior is not affected by the value of the index_status
attribute.
If you provide no value or specify a null value for index_status
, the query returns an error if the rules index does not have a valid status.
If you specify the string INCOMPLETE
for the index_status
attribute, the query is performed if the status of the rules index is incomplete or valid.
If you specify the string INVALID
for the index_status
attribute, the query is performed regardless of the actual status of the rules index (invalid, incomplete, or valid).
However, the following considerations apply if the status of the rules index is incomplete or invalid:
If the status is incomplete, the content of a rules index may be approximate, because some triples that are inferable (due to the recent insertions into the underlying RDF models) may not actually be present in the rules index, and therefore results returned by the query may be inaccurate.
If the status is invalid, the content of the rules index may be approximate, because some triples that are no longer inferable (due to recent modifications to the underlying models or rulebases, or both) may still be present in the rules index, and this may affect the accuracy of the result returned by the query. In addition to possible presence of triples that are no longer inferable, some inferable rows may not actually be present in the rules index.
To load data RDF data into the Spatial network data model, you can use either the Java application programming interface (API), as described in Section 1.6.1, or transactional INSERT statements in SQL or PL/SQL, as described in Section 1.6.2.
To export RDF data, use the Java API, as described in Section 1.6.3.
To load RDF data, the data must be in NTriple format. Two methods from the NTripleConverter
Java class are available for loading the data:
nTriple2NDM(String, String, String)
loads complete statements found in the NTriple file.
nTriple2NDM(String, String, String, int)
loads complete statements, reusing blank nodes when the same blank node name appears in more than one incoming statement. Use this method to load data with RDF containers or collections, or to load data of unknown content.
If you use the Java API to load RDF data, the table to store references to the RDF data must have a column named ID of type NUMBER and a column named TRIPLE of type SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S. The table can contain other columns, and the columns can be in any order, but the table must contain at least these two columns.
To convert RDF/XML data to NTriple format, you have several options, including the following:
You can use the Jena2 rdfparse()
class. To use this class, download Jena2 (http://jena.sourceforge.net/downloads.html
) and follow the installation instructions. To covert an RDF/XML file to NTriple format using the rdfparse()
class, use a command in the following format:
java jena.rdfparse input.rdf > output.nt
You can edit the sample rss2insert.xsl or rssn2triple.xsl file to convert all the features in the RDF/XML file. After editing the XSLT, download an XSLT processor and follow the installation and usage instructions.
For information about using the NTripleConverter
class, including how to compile and run an example, see the README.txt
file in the sdordf_converter.zip
file, which you can download from the Oracle Technology Network.
To load RDF data using INSERT statements, the data should be encoded using < >
(angle brackets) for URIs, _:
(underscore colon) for blank nodes, and " "
(quotation marks) for literals. Spaces are not allowed in URIs or blank nodes. Use the SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S constructor to insert the data, as described in Section 1.4.1.
Note:
If URIs are not encoded with< >
and literals with " "
, statements will still be processed. However, the statements will take longer to load, since they will have to be further processed to determine their VALUE_TYPE values.The following example includes statements with URIs, a blank node (the model_id for nsu is 4), a literal, a literal with a language tag, and a typed literal:
INSERT INTO nsu_data VALUES (SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('nsu', '<http://www.nature.com/nsu/rss.rdf>', '<http://purl.org/rss/1.0/title>', '"Nature''s Science Update"')); INSERT INTO nsu_data VALUES (SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('nsu', '_:BNSEQN1001A', '<http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type>', '<http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#Seq>', 4)); INSERT INTO nsu_data VALUES (SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('nsu', '<http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/dynapage.taf?file=/nature/journal/v428/n6978/index.html>', '<http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/language>', '"EnglishÓ@en-GB')); INSERT INTO nature VALUES (SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('nsu', '<http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/428004b>', '<http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/date>', '"2004-03-04"^^xsd:date'));
To convert RDF/XML data to INSERT statements, you can edit the sample rss2insert.xsl
XSLT file to convert all the features in the RDF/XML file. The blank node constructor is used to insert statements with blank nodes. After editing the XSLT, download the Xalan XSLT processor (http://xml.apache.org/xalan
) and follow the installation instructions. To convert an RDF/XML file to INSERT statements using your edited version of the rss2insert.xsl
file, use a command in the following format:
java org.apache.xalan.xslt.Process –in input.rdf -xsl rss2insert.xsl –out output.nt
To output RDF data stored in the network data model to a file in NTriple format, use the NTripleConverter
Java class. The NDM2NTriple(String, int)
method exports all the triples stored for the specified model.
For information about using the NTriple converter
class, see the README.txt
file in the sdordf_converter.zip
file, which you can download from the Oracle Technology Network.
To work with RDF objects in an Oracle database, follow these general steps:
Create a tablespace for the RDF system tables. You must be connected as a user with appropriate privileges to create the tablespace. The following example creates a tablespace named RDF_TBLSPACE:
CREATE TABLESPACE rdf_tblspace DATAFILE '/oradata/orcl/rdf_tblspace.dat' SIZE 1024M REUSE AUTOEXTEND ON NEXT 256M MAXSIZE UNLIMITED SEGMENT SPACE MANAGEMENT AUTO;
Create an RDF network.
Creating an RDF network adds RDF support to an Oracle database. You must create an RDF network as a user with DBA privileges, specifying a valid tablespace with adequate space. Create the network only once for an Oracle database.
The following example creates an RDF network using a tablespace named RDF_TBLSPACE (which must already exist):
EXECUTE SDO_RDF.CREATE_RDF_NETWORK('rdf_tblspace');
Connect as the database user under whose schema you will store your RDF data; do not perform the following steps while connected as SYS, SYSTEM, or MDSYS.
Create a table to store references to the RDF data. (You do not need to be connected as a user with DBA privileges for this step and the remaining steps.)
This table must contain a column of type SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S, which will contain references to all data associated with a single RDF model. It is recommended that the table include a column named ID of type NUMBER and a column named TRIPLE of type SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S, because the default loaders provided by Oracle assume that these columns exist.
The following example creates a table named ARTICLES_RDF_DATA:
CREATE TABLE articles_rdf_data (id NUMBER, triple SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S);
Create an RDF model.
When you create an RDF model, you specify the model name, the table to hold references to RDF data for the model, and the column of type SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S in that table.
The following command creates a model named ARTICLES, which will use the table created in the preceding step.
EXECUTE SDO_RDF.CREATE_RDF_MODEL('articles', 'articles_rdf_data', 'triple');
Where possible, create Oracle database indexes on conditions that will be specified in the WHERE clause of SELECT statements, to provide better performance for such queries. The following example creates such indexes:
-- Create indexes on the subjects, properties, objects, and -- triple IDs in the FAMILY_RDF_DATA table. CREATE INDEX family_sub_idx ON family_rdf_data (triple.GET_SUBJECT()); CREATE INDEX family_prop_idx ON family_rdf_data (triple.GET_PROPERTY()); CREATE INDEX family_obj_idx ON family_rdf_data (TO_CHAR(triple.GET_OBJECT())); CREATE INDEX family_tri_idx ON family_rdf_data (triple.rdf_t_id);
After you create the model, you can insert triples into the table, as shown in the examples in Section 1.8.
This section contains the following PL/SQL examples for the Resource Description Framework:
These examples are adapted from RDF demos that are supplied with Oracle Spatial. If you installed the demo files from the Companion CD, RDF demo files are under the directory for Spatial network demo files.
This section presents a simplified PL/SQL example of an RDF model for statements about journal articles. Example 1-8 contains descriptive comments, refer to concepts that are explained in this chapter, and uses functions and procedures documented in Chapter 2.
Example 1-8 Using an RDF Model for Journal Article Information
-- Basic steps: -- After you have connected as a privileged user and called -- SDO_RDF.CREATE_RDF_NETWORK to add RDF support, -- connect as a regular database user and do the following. -- 1. For each desired RDF model, create a table to hold its data. -- 2. For each RDF model, create an RDF model (SDO_RDF.CREATE_RDF_MODEL). -- 3. For each table to hold RDF data, insert data into the table. -- 4. Use various subprograms and consructors. -- Create the table to hold data for the RDF model. CREATE TABLE articles_rdf_data (id NUMBER, triple SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S); -- Create the RDF model. EXECUTE SDO_RDF.CREATE_RDF_MODEL('articles', 'articles_rdf_data', 'triple'); -- Information to be stored about some fictitious articles: -- Article1, titled "All about XYZ" and written by Jane Smith, refers -- to Article2 and Article3. -- Article2, titled "A review of ABC" and written by Joe Bloggs, -- refers to Article3. -- Seven SQL statements to store the information. In each statement: -- Each article is referred to by its complete URI The URIs in -- this example are fictitious, although they are in the general -- domain of the journal Nature (http://www.nature.com/nature/). -- Each property is referred to by the URL for its definition, as -- created by the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative. -- Insert rows into the table. -- Article1 has the title "All about XYZ". INSERT INTO articles_rdf_data VALUES (1, sdo_rdf_triple_s ('articles','http://www.nature.com/nature/Article1', 'http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/title','All about XYZ')); -- Article1 was created (written) by Jane Smith. INSERT INTO articles_rdf_data VALUES (2, sdo_rdf_triple_s ('articles','http://www.nature.com/nature/Article1', 'http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/creator', 'Jane Smith')); -- Article1 references (refers to) Article2. INSERT INTO articles_rdf_data VALUES (3, sdo_rdf_triple_s ('articles', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article1', 'http://purl.org/dc/terms/references', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article2')); -- Article1 references (refers to) Article3. INSERT INTO articles_rdf_data VALUES (4, sdo_rdf_triple_s ('articles', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article1', 'http://purl.org/dc/terms/references', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article3')); -- Article2 has the title "A review of ABC". INSERT INTO articles_rdf_data VALUES (5, sdo_rdf_triple_s ('articles', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article2', 'http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/title', 'A review of ABC')); -- Article2 was created (written) by Joe Bloggs. INSERT INTO articles_rdf_data VALUES (6, sdo_rdf_triple_s ('articles', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article2', 'http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/creator', 'Joe Bloggs')); -- Article2 references (refers to) Article3. INSERT INTO articles_rdf_data VALUES (7, sdo_rdf_triple_s ('articles', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article2', 'http://purl.org/dc/terms/references', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article3')); COMMIT; -- Add namespaces for cataloging. EXECUTE SDO_RDF.ADD_NAMESPACES('http://www.w3.org-/2001/XMLSchema#', - 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#', - 'http://purl.org/dc/terms#'); -- Query RDF data. SELECT SDO_RDF.GET_MODEL_ID('articles') AS model_id FROM DUAL; SELECT SDO_RDF.GET_TRIPLE_ID( 'articles', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article2', 'http://purl.org/dc/terms/references', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article3') AS RDF_triple_id FROM DUAL; SELECT SDO_RDF.IS_REIFIED_QUAD( 'articles', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article2', 'http://purl.org/dc/terms/references', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article3') AS is_reified_quad FROM DUAL; SELECT SDO_RDF.IS_TRIPLE( 'articles', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article2', 'http://purl.org/dc/terms/references', 'http://www.nature.com/nature/Article3') AS is_triple FROM DUAL; -- Use SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S member functions in queries. SELECT a.triple.GET_TRIPLE() AS triple FROM articles_rdf_data a WHERE a.id = 1; SELECT a.triple.GET_SUBJECT() AS subject FROM articles_rdf_data a WHERE a.id = 1; SELECT a.triple.GET_PROPERTY() AS property FROM articles_rdf_data a WHERE a.id = 1; SELECT a.triple.GET_OBJECT() AS object FROM articles_rdf_data a WHERE a.id = 1;
This section presents a simplified PL/SQL example of an RDF model for statements about family tree (genealogy) information. Example 1-8 contains descriptive comments, refer to concepts that are explained in this chapter, and uses functions and procedures documented in Chapter 2 and Chapter 3.
The family relationships in this example reflect the family tree shown in Figure 1-1. This figure also shows some of the information directly stated in the example: Cathy is the sister of Jack, Jack and Tom are male, and Cindy is female.
Example 1-9 Using an RDF Model for Family Information
-- Basic steps: -- After you have connected as a privileged user and called -- SDO_RDF.CREATE_RDF_NETWORK to enable RDF support, -- connect as a regular database user and do the following. -- 1. For each desired RDF model, create a table to hold its data. -- 2. For each RDF model, create an RDF model (SDO_RDF.CREATE_RDF_MODEL). -- 3. For each table to hold RDF data, insert data into the table. -- 4. Use various subprograms and constructors. -- Create the table to hold data for the RDF model. CREATE TABLE family_rdf_data (id NUMBER, triple SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S); -- Create the RDF model. execute sdo_rdf.create_rdf_model('family', 'family_rdf_data', 'triple'); -- Insert rows into the table. These express the following information: ----------------- -- John and Janice have two children, Suzie and Matt. -- Matt married Martha, and they have two children: -- Tom (male, height 5.75) and Cindy (female, height 06.00). -- Suzie married Sammy, and they have two children: -- Cathy (height 5.8) and Jack (male, height 6). -- Person is a class that has two subslasses: Male and Female. -- parentOf is a property that has two subproperties: fatherOf and motherOf. -- siblingOf is a property that has two subproperties: brotherOf and sisterOf. -- The domain of the fatherOf and brotherOf properties is Male. -- The domain of the motherOf and sisterOf properties is Female. ------------------------ -- John is the father of Suzie. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (1, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/John', 'http://www.example.org/family/fatherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Suzie')); -- John is the father of Matt. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (2, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/John', 'http://www.example.org/family/fatherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Matt')); -- Janice is the mother of Suzie. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (3, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Janice', 'http://www.example.org/family/motherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Suzie')); -- Janice is the mother of Matt. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (4, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Janice', 'http://www.example.org/family/motherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Matt')); -- Sammy is the father of Cathy. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (5, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Sammy', 'http://www.example.org/family/fatherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Cathy')); -- Sammy is the father of Jack. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (6, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Sammy', 'http://www.example.org/family/fatherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Jack')); -- Suzie is the mother of Cathy. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (7, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Suzie', 'http://www.example.org/family/motherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Cathy')); -- Suzie is the mother of Jack. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (8, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Suzie', 'http://www.example.org/family/motherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Jack')); -- Matt is the father of Tom. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (9, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Matt', 'http://www.example.org/family/fatherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Tom')); -- Matt is the father of Cindy INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (10, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Matt', 'http://www.example.org/family/fatherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Cindy')); -- Martha is the mother of Tom. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (11, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Martha', 'http://www.example.org/family/motherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Tom')); -- Martha is the mother of Cindy. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (12, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Martha', 'http://www.example.org/family/motherOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Cindy')); -- Cathy is the sister of Jack. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (13, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Cathy', 'http://www.example.org/family/sisterOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Jack')); -- Jack is male. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (14, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Jack', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type', 'http://www.example.org/family/Male')); -- Tom is male. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (15, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Tom', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type', 'http://www.example.org/family/Male')); -- Cindy is female. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (16, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Cindy', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type', 'http://www.example.org/family/Female')); -- Person is a class. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (17, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Person', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#Class')); -- Male is a subclass of Person. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (18, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Male', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#subClassOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Person')); -- Female is a subclass of Person. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (19, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Female', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#subClassOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/Person')); -- siblingOf is a property. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (20, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/siblingOf', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#Property')); -- parentOf is a property. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (21, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/parentOf', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#Property')); -- brotherOf is a subproperty of siblingOf. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (22, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/brotherOf', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#subPropertyOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/siblingOf')); -- sisterOf is a subproperty of siblingOf. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (23, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/sisterOf', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#subPropertyOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/siblingOf')); -- A brother is male. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (24, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/brotherOf', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#domain', 'http://www.example.org/family/Male')); -- A sister is female. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (25, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/sisterOf', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#domain', 'http://www.example.org/family/Female')); -- fatherOf is a subproperty of parentOf. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (26, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/fatherOf', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#subPropertyOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/parentOf')); -- motherOf is a subproperty of parentOf. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (27, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/motherOf', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#subPropertyOf', 'http://www.example.org/family/parentOf')); -- A father is male. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (28, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/fatherOf', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#domain', 'http://www.example.org/family/Male')); -- A mother is female. INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (29, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/motherOf', 'http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#domain', 'http://www.example.org/family/Female')); -- Use SET ESCAPE OFF to prevent the caret (^) from being -- interpreted as an escape character. Two carets (^^) are -- used to represent typed literals. SET ESCAPE OFF; -- Cathy's height is 5.8 (decimal). INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (30, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Cathy', 'http://www.example.org/family/height', '"5.8"^^xsd:decimal')); -- Jack's height is 6 (integer). INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (31, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Jack', 'http://www.example.org/family/height', '"6"^^xsd:integer')); -- Tom's height is 05.75 (decimal). INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (32, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Tom', 'http://www.example.org/family/height', '"05.75"^^xsd:decimal')); -- Cindy's height is 06.00 (decimal). INSERT INTO family_rdf_data VALUES (33, SDO_RDF_TRIPLE_S('family', 'http://www.example.org/family/Cindy', 'http://www.example.org/family/height', '"06.00"^^xsd:decimal')); COMMIT; -- RDFS inferencing in the family model BEGIN SDO_RDF_INFERENCE.CREATE_RULES_INDEX( 'rdfs_rix_family', SDO_RDF_Models('family'), SDO_RDF_Rulebases('RDFS')); END; / -- Select all males from the family model, without inferencing. SELECT m FROM TABLE(SDO_RDF_MATCH( '(?m rdf:type :Male)', SDO_RDF_Models('family'), null, SDO_RDF_Aliases(SDO_RDF_Alias('','http://www.example.org/family/')), null)); -- Select all males from the family model, with RDFS inferencing. SELECT m FROM TABLE(SDO_RDF_MATCH( '(?m rdf:type :Male)', SDO_RDF_Models('family'), SDO_RDF_Rulebases('RDFS'), SDO_RDF_Aliases(SDO_RDF_Alias('','http://www.example.org/family/')), null)); -- General inferencing in the family model EXECUTE SDO_RDF_INFERENCE.CREATE_RULEBASE('family_rb'); INSERT INTO mdsys.rdfr_family_rb VALUES( 'grandparent_rule', '(?x :parentOf ?y) (?y :parentOf ?z)', NULL, '(?x :grandParentOf ?z)', SDO_RDF_Aliases(SDO_RDF_Alias('','http://www.example.org/family/'))); COMMIT; -- Because a new rulebase has been created, and it will be used in the -- rules index, drop the preceding rules index and then re-create it. EXECUTE SDO_RDF_INFERENCE.DROP_RULES_INDEX ('rdfs_rix_family'); -- Re-create the rules index. BEGIN SDO_RDF_INFERENCE.CREATE_RULES_INDEX( 'rdfs_rix_family', SDO_RDF_Models('family'), SDO_RDF_Rulebases('RDFS','family_rb')); END; / -- Select all grandfathers and their grandchildren from the family model, -- without inferencing. (With no inferencing, no results are returned.) SELECT x grandfather, y grandchild FROM TABLE(SDO_RDF_MATCH( '(?x :grandParentOf ?y) (?x rdf:type :Male)', SDO_RDF_Models('family'), null, SDO_RDF_Aliases(SDO_RDF_Alias('','http://www.example.org/family/')), null)); -- Select all grandfathers and their grandchildren from the family model. -- Use inferencing from both the RDFS and family_rb rulebases. SELECT x grandfather, y grandchild FROM TABLE(SDO_RDF_MATCH( '(?x :grandParentOf ?y) (?x rdf:type :Male)', SDO_RDF_Models('family'), SDO_RDF_Rulebases('RDFS','family_rb'), SDO_RDF_Aliases(SDO_RDF_Alias('','http://www.example.org/family/')), null)); -- Set up to find grandfathers of tall (>= 6) grandchildren -- from the family model, with RDFS inferencing and -- inferencing using the "family_rb" rulebase. UPDATE mdsys.rdfr_family_rb SET antecedents = '(?x :parentOf ?y) (?y :parentOf ?z) (?z :height ?h)', filter = '(h >= 6)', aliases = SDO_RDF_Aliases(SDO_RDF_Alias('','http://www.example.org/family/')) WHERE rule_name = 'GRANDPARENT_RULE'; -- Because the rulebase has been updated, drop the preceding rules index, -- and then re-create it. EXECUTE SDO_RDF_INFERENCE.DROP_RULES_INDEX ('rdfs_rix_family'); -- Re-create the rules index. BEGIN SDO_RDF_INFERENCE.CREATE_RULES_INDEX( 'rdfs_rix_family', SDO_RDF_Models('family'), SDO_RDF_Rulebases('RDFS','family_rb')); END; / -- Find the rules index that was just created (that is, the -- one based on the specified model and rulebases). SELECT SDO_RDF_INFERENCE.LOOKUP_RULES_INDEX(SDO_RDF_MODELS('family'), SDO_RDF_RULEBASES('RDFS','family_rb')) AS lookup_rules_index FROM DUAL; -- Select grandfathers of tall (>= 6) grandchildren, and their -- tall grandchildren. SELECT x grandfather, y grandchild FROM TABLE(SDO_RDF_MATCH( '(?x :grandParentOf ?y) (?x rdf:type :Male)', SDO_RDF_Models('family'), SDO_RDF_RuleBases('RDFS','family_rb'), SDO_RDF_Aliases(SDO_RDF_Alias('','http://www.example.org/family/')), null));
A README.txt
file supplements the information in this document and the following manuals: Oracle Spatial User's Guide and Reference, Oracle Spatial GeoRaster, and Oracle Spatial Topology and Network Data Models (this manual). This file is located at:
$ORACLE_HOME/md/doc/README.txt