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Composite Sinks

A Composite Sink handles the following steps of composite view indexing

  • Querying for the graphs of resources in the Blazegraph common namespace of the view
  • Converting the obtained graphs into a format that can be pushed to a target sink
  • Finally, pushing the resources to the target sink

These steps can be implemented in different ways. In Nexus Delta, there are two kinds of Composite Sink that can be selected via configuration.

  1. Single Composite Sink
  2. Batch Composite Sink

Single Composite Sink

By default, Nexus Delta will use the Single Composite Sink. This sink performs one query to the Blazegraph common namespace for each resource in the project. The queries are done in chronological order (by the updatedAt time of the resources).

We recommend reading through the search configuration example use case and the Composite View API reference to learn more about Composite Views.

Batch Composite Sink

Starting with Delta 1.9, it is possible to configure Nexus Delta to use a Batch Composite Sink. This implementation of the Composite Sink can query the Blazegraph common namespace for multiple resource IDs at the same time.

Note

We recommend to start using Composite Views with the default Single Composite Sink. Once you have a good understanding of it, the Batch Composite Sink can be used to enhance the performance of your deployment.

Configuring the Batch Composite Sink

In order to enable the Batch Composite Sink, configure the following Nexus Delta property:

plugins.composite-views.sink-config = batch

Furthermore, you can configure the maximum size of a batch and the maximum interval using:

plugins.composite-views.{projection-plugin}-batch.max-elements = {max-elements}

plugins.composite-views.{projection-plugin}-batch.max-interval = {max-interval}

where:

  • {projection-plugin} is either elasticsearch or blazegraph. The batching options of a Composite Sink can be set separately for each target type.
  • {max-elements} is the maximum number of elements to batch at once (defaults to 10)
  • {max-interval} is the maximum interval of time to wait for {max-elements} elements

How to write a SPARQL construct query for the Batch Composite Sink

In order to use the Batch Composite Sink successfully, it is necessary to rework some aspects of a regular SPARQL construct query. We explain the changes through an example.

Example

Suppose we are in a situation where Composite Views are using the Single Composite Sink and have the following query:

PREFIX schema: <http://schema.org/>
PREFIX nxv: <https://bluebrain.github.io/nexus/vocabulary/>
CONSTRUCT {
  ?id     nxv:name   ?name   ;
          nxv:age    ?age    .
          nxv:parent ?parent .
} WHERE {
  BIND({resource_id} AS ?id) .
  ?id schema:name ?name .
  
  OPTIONAL { ?id schema:age ?age }
  OPTIONAL { ?id schema:parent ?parent . }
}

Using the default Single Composite Sink, Nexus Delta will query the resources Alice and Bob individually and obtain the following n-triples from Blazegraph:

<http://people.com/Alice> <http://schema.org/name> <Alice>
<http://people.com/Alice> <http://schema.org/parent> <http://people.com/Bob>
<http://people.com/Bob> <http://schema.org/name> <Bob>
<http://people.com/Bob> <http://schema.org/age> <42>

In particular, note that when looking at the graph of Alice, we do not know the age of Bob.

The first change to introduce in order to make this query work with batches of resources is to replace the BIND({resource_id} AS ?id) . with VALUES ?id { {resources_id} }. Nexus Delta will use this template to replace {resource_id} with multiple resource in case it receives a batch of more than one element. The query is now:

PREFIX schema: <http://schema.org/>
PREFIX nxv: <https://bluebrain.github.io/nexus/vocabulary/>
CONSTRUCT {
  ?id     nxv:name   ?name   ;
          nxv:age    ?age    .
          nxv:parent ?parent .
} WHERE {
  VALUES ?id { {resource_id} } .
  ?id schema:name ?name .
  
  OPTIONAL { ?id schema:age ?age }
  OPTIONAL { ?id schema:parent ?parent . }
}

With the Batch Composite Sink enabled, if Alice and Bob are batched together, this query will result in the following triples:

<http://people.com/Alice> <http://schema.org/name> <Alice>
<http://people.com/Alice> <http://schema.org/parent> <http://people.com/Bob>
<http://people.com/Bob> <http://schema.org/name> <Bob>
<http://people.com/Bob> <http://schema.org/age> <42>

Note how the results are the merged result of the individual queries. While we were able to query several resources simultaneously, we are now facing a framing problem. If we try to frame http://people.com/Alice, its graph now contains more information than before; it will now include the age of Bob, something that we did not request.

In order to solve this problem, we will introduce aliasing for the root resource IDs. The query will now become:

PREFIX schema: <http://schema.org/>
PREFIX nxv: <https://bluebrain.github.io/nexus/vocabulary/>
CONSTRUCT {
  ?alias  nxv:name   ?name   ;
          nxv:age    ?age    .
          nxv:parent ?parent .
} WHERE {
  VALUES ?id { {resource_id} } .
  BIND(IRI(CONCAT(STR(?id), '/alias')) AS ?alias) .
  
  ?id schema:name ?name .
  
  OPTIONAL { ?id schema:age ?age }
  OPTIONAL { ?id schema:parent ?parent }
}

With this query, a batch query for both Alice and Bob will now yield:

<http://people.com/Alice/alias> <http://schema.org/name> <Alice>
<http://people.com/Alice/alias> <http://schema.org/parent> <http://people.com/Bob>
<http://people.com/Bob/alias> <http://schema.org/name> <Bob>
<http://people.com/Bob/alias> <http://schema.org/age> <42>

You can see that the root node of Bob’s graph is now http://people.com/Bob/alias, while Alice’s parent is http://people.com/Bob. This distinction ensures that we cannot get Bob’s age by looking at Alice’s graph, thus reproducing the behavior that we had with the Single Composite Sink.

Nexus Delta takes care of framing these results so that the framed documents will be the same as with the Single Composite Sink, and will not contain any alias keyword. For example, for the resource http://people.com/Alice, Nexus Delta will obtain its graph by looking at the http://people.com/Alice/alias root node, and use the resulting graph (removing the /alias part) for JSON-LD framing.

Summary

To use the Batch Composite Sink the following changes are necessary:

  • BIND({resource_id} AS ?id) must become VALUES ?id { {resource_id} } to allow for batches of resources to be queried from Blazegraph.
  • BIND(IRI(CONCAT(STR(?id), '/alias')) AS ?alias) needs to be added, and the relevant (?id) “root nodes” replaced by ?alias in the CONSTRUCT part of the query. This is done in order to avoid any clashes between the graphs of several resources. Do note that in case you have several “root nodes” in the CONSTRUCT part of your construct query, you might need several aliases.