2011
Authors
Cruz, Flavio; Rocha, Ricardo;
Publication
CoRR
Abstract
2012
Authors
Areias, M; Rocha, R;
Publication
THEORY AND PRACTICE OF LOGIC PROGRAMMING
Abstract
Multi-threading is currently supported by several well-known Prolog systems providing a highly portable solution for applications that can benefit from concurrency. When multi-threading is combined with tabling, we can exploit the power of higher procedural control and declarative semantics. However, despite the availability of both threads and tabling in some Prolog systems, the implementation of these two features implies complex ties to each other and to the underlying engine. Until now, XSB was the only Prolog system combining multi-threading with tabling. In XSB, tables may be either private or shared between threads. While thread-private tables are easier to implement, shared tables have all the associated issues of locking, synchronization and potential deadlocks. In this paper, we propose an alternative view to XSB's approach. In our proposal, each thread views its tables as private but, at the engine level, we use a common table space where tables are shared among all threads. We present three designs for our common table space approach: No-Sharing (NS) (similar to XSB's private tables), Subgoal-Sharing (SS) and Full-Sharing (FS). The primary goal of this work was to reduce the memory usage for the table space but, our experimental results, using the YapTab tabling system with a local evaluation strategy, show that we can also achieve significant reductions on running time.
2008
Authors
Fonseca, NA; Costa, VS; Rocha, R; Camacho, R;
Publication
APPLIED COMPUTING 2008, VOLS 1-3
Abstract
The amount of data collected and stored in databases is growing considerably in almost all areas of human activity. In complex applications the data involves several relations and proposionalization is not a suitable approach. Multi-Relational Data Mining algorithms can analyze data from multiple relations, with no need to transform the data into a single table, but are computationally more expensive. In this paper a novel relational classification algorithm based on the k-nearest neighbour algorithm is presented and evaluated.
2012
Authors
Costa, VS; Rocha, R; Damas, L;
Publication
THEORY AND PRACTICE OF LOGIC PROGRAMMING
Abstract
Yet Another Prolog (YAP) is a Prolog system originally developed in the mid-eighties and that has been under almost constant development since then. This paper presents the general structure and design of the YAP system, focusing on three important contributions to the Logic Programming community. First, it describes the main techniques used in YAP to achieve an efficient Prolog engine. Second, most Logic Programming systems have a rather limited indexing algorithm. YAP contributes to this area by providing a dynamic indexing mechanism, or just-in-time indexer. Third, a important contribution of the YAP system has been the integration of both or-parallelism and tabling in a single Logic Programming system.
2011
Authors
Kimmig, A; Demoen, B; De Raedt, L; Costa, VS; Rocha, R;
Publication
THEORY AND PRACTICE OF LOGIC PROGRAMMING
Abstract
The past few years have seen a surge of interest in the field of probabilistic logic learning and statistical relational learning. In this endeavor, many probabilistic logics have been developed. ProbLog is a recent probabilistic extension of Prolog motivated by the mining of large biological networks. In ProbLog, facts can be labeled with probabilities. These facts are treated as mutually independent random variables that indicate whether these facts belong to a randomly sampled program. Different kinds of queries can be posed to ProbLog programs. We introduce algorithms that allow the efficient execution of these queries, discuss their implementation on top of the YAP-Prolog system, and evaluate their performance in the context of large networks of biological entities.
2011
Authors
Areias, M; Rocha, R;
Publication
THEORY AND PRACTICE OF LOGIC PROGRAMMING
Abstract
Tabled evaluation is a recognized and powerful technique that overcomes some limitations of traditional Prolog systems in dealing with recursion and redundant subcomputations. We can distinguish two main categories of tabling mechanisms: suspension-based tabling and linear tabling. While suspension-based mechanisms are considered to obtain better results in general, they have more memory space requirements and are more complex and harder to implement than linear tabling mechanisms. Arguably, the SLDT and Dynamic Reordering of Alternatives (DRA) strategies are the two most successful extensions to standard linear tabled evaluation. In this work, we propose a new strategy, named dynamic reordering of solutions, and we present a framework, on top of the Yap system, that supports the combination of all these three strategies. Our implementation shares the underlying execution environment and most of the data structures used to implement tabling in Yap. We thus argue that all these common features allows us to make a first and fair comparison between these different linear tabling strategies and, therefore, better understand the advantages and weaknesses of each, when used solely or combined with the others.
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