In-memory databases have changed the database paradigm and one of the new research issues that introduce this paradigm is the non-frequently used tables available in main memory. They have to be store only in disk and the memory released. But when an isolated query is requested against these tables they have to be uploaded again in main memory. In order to avoid this time expensive and inefficient situation it is propose within this project a clever way to store the table in disk. Then when a query is requested with the help of a buffer and a reduced amount of IO operations the complete query is performed and uploading the full table in main memory is avoided.Ingeniería de Telecomunicació
The ever-growing demand for more computing power forces hardware vendors to put an increasing number...
In the past decade, we have seen two major evolutions on storage technologies: flash storage and non...
[[abstract]]Due to the fast access performance, byte-addressability, and non-volatility of non-volat...
In-memory databases have changed the database paradigm and one of the new research issues that intr...
Abstract-Memory resident database systems (MMDB’s) store 2) Main memory is normally volatile, while ...
Tertiary storage devices have long been in use for storing massive amounts of data in file-oriented ...
Abstract—The increase in the capacity of main memory coupled with the decrease in cost has fueled th...
Relational database management systems currently keep large volumes of data in secondary storage. Bu...
One of the key tenets of database system design is making efficient use of storage and memory resour...
Traditional Database Management System (DBMS) software relies on hard disks for storing relational d...
We propose a new storage model called MBSM (Multiresolution Block Storage Model) for laying out tabl...
Lightweight computing devices are becoming ubiquitous and an increasing number of applications are b...
htmlabstractMany applications with manually implemented data management exhibit a data storage patte...
The popularity of high-density flash memory as data storage media has increased steadily for a wide ...
The use of flash-based solid state drives (SSDs) in storage systems is growing. Adding SSDs to a sto...
The ever-growing demand for more computing power forces hardware vendors to put an increasing number...
In the past decade, we have seen two major evolutions on storage technologies: flash storage and non...
[[abstract]]Due to the fast access performance, byte-addressability, and non-volatility of non-volat...
In-memory databases have changed the database paradigm and one of the new research issues that intr...
Abstract-Memory resident database systems (MMDB’s) store 2) Main memory is normally volatile, while ...
Tertiary storage devices have long been in use for storing massive amounts of data in file-oriented ...
Abstract—The increase in the capacity of main memory coupled with the decrease in cost has fueled th...
Relational database management systems currently keep large volumes of data in secondary storage. Bu...
One of the key tenets of database system design is making efficient use of storage and memory resour...
Traditional Database Management System (DBMS) software relies on hard disks for storing relational d...
We propose a new storage model called MBSM (Multiresolution Block Storage Model) for laying out tabl...
Lightweight computing devices are becoming ubiquitous and an increasing number of applications are b...
htmlabstractMany applications with manually implemented data management exhibit a data storage patte...
The popularity of high-density flash memory as data storage media has increased steadily for a wide ...
The use of flash-based solid state drives (SSDs) in storage systems is growing. Adding SSDs to a sto...
The ever-growing demand for more computing power forces hardware vendors to put an increasing number...
In the past decade, we have seen two major evolutions on storage technologies: flash storage and non...
[[abstract]]Due to the fast access performance, byte-addressability, and non-volatility of non-volat...