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Index intransitive and transitive n-ary relationships.

Project description

Relation Catalog

Overview

The relation catalog can be used to optimize intransitive and transitive searches for N-ary relations of finite, preset dimensions.

For example, you can index simple two-way relations, like employee to supervisor; RDF-style triples of subject-predicate-object; and more complex relations such as subject-predicate-object with context and state. These can be searched with variable definitions of transitive behavior.

The catalog can be used in the ZODB or standalone. It is a generic, relatively policy-free tool.

It is expected to be used usually as an engine for more specialized and constrained tools and APIs. Three such tools are zc.relationship containers, plone.relations containers, and zc.vault. The documents in the package, including this one, describe other possible uses.

History

This is a refactoring of the ZODB-only parts of the zc.relationship package. Specifically, the zc.relation catalog is largely equivalent to the zc.relationship index. The index in the zc.relationship 2.x line is an almost-completely backwards-compatible wrapper of the zc.relation catalog. zc.relationship will continue to be maintained, though active development is expected to go into zc.relation.

Many of the ideas come from discussions with and code from Casey Duncan, Tres Seaver, Ken Manheimer, and more.

Setting Up a Relation Catalog

In this section, we will be introducing the following ideas.

  • Relations are objects with indexed values.

  • You add value indexes to relation catalogs to be able to search. Values can be identified to the catalog with callables or interface elements. The indexed value must be specified to the catalog as a single value or a collection.

  • Relations and their values are stored in the catalog as tokens: unique identifiers that you can resolve back to the original value. Integers are the most efficient tokens, but others can work fine too.

  • Token type determines the BTree module needed.

  • You must define your own functions for tokenizing and resolving tokens. These functions are registered with the catalog for the relations and for each of their value indexes.

  • Relations are indexed with index.

We will use a simple two way relation as our example here. A brief introduction to a more complex RDF-style subject-predicate-object set up can be found later in the document.

Creating the Catalog

Imagine a two way relation from one value to another. Let’s say that we are modeling a relation of people to their supervisors: an employee may have a single supervisor. For this first example, the relation between employee and supervisor will be intrinsic: the employee has a pointer to the supervisor, and the employee object itself represents the relation.

Let’s say further, for simplicity, that employee names are unique and can be used to represent employees. We can use names as our “tokens”.

Tokens are similar to the primary key in a relational database. A token is a way to identify an object. It must sort reliably and you must be able to write a callable that reliably resolves to the object given the right context. In Zope 3, intids (zope.app.intid) and keyreferences (zope.app.keyreference) are good examples of reasonable tokens.

As we’ll see below, you provide a way to convert objects to tokens, and resolve tokens to objects, for the relations, and for each value index individually. They can be the all the same functions or completely different, depending on your needs.

For speed, integers make the best tokens; followed by other immutables like strings; followed by non-persistent objects; followed by persistent objects. The choice also determines a choice of BTree module, as we’ll see below.

Here is our toy Employee example class. Again, we will use the employee name as the tokens.

>>> employees = {} # we'll use this to resolve the "name" tokens
>>> class Employee(object):
...     def __init__(self, name, supervisor=None):
...         if name in employees:
...             raise ValueError('employee with same name already exists')
...         self.name = name # expect this to be readonly
...         self.supervisor = supervisor
...         employees[name] = self
...     # the next parts just make the tests prettier
...     def __repr__(self):
...         return '<Employee instance "' + self.name + '">'
...     def __cmp__(self, other):
...         # pukes if other doesn't have name
...         return cmp(self.name, other.name)
...

So, we need to define how to turn employees into their tokens. We call the tokenization a “dump” function. Conversely, the function to resolve tokens into objects is called a “load”.

Functions to dump relations and values get several arguments. The first argument is the object to be tokenized. Next, because it helps sometimes to provide context, is the catalog. The last argument is a dictionary that will be shared for a given search. The dictionary can be ignored, or used as a cache for optimizations (for instance, to stash a utility that you looked up).

For this example, our function is trivial: we said the token would be the employee’s name.

>>> def dumpEmployees(emp, catalog, cache):
...     return emp.name
...

If you store the relation catalog persistently (e.g., in the ZODB) be aware that the callables you provide must be picklable–a module-level function, for instance.

We also need a way to turn tokens into employees, or “load”.

The “load” functions get the token to be resolved; the catalog, for context; and a dict cache, for optimizations of subsequent calls.

You might have noticed in our Employee.__init__ that we keep a mapping of name to object in the employees global dict (defined right above the class definition). We’ll use that for resolving the tokens.

>>> def loadEmployees(token, catalog, cache):
...     return employees[token]
...

Now we know enough to get started with a catalog. We’ll instantiate it by specifying how to tokenize relations, and what kind of BTree modules should be used to hold the tokens.

How do you pick BTree modules?

  • If the tokens are 32-bit ints, choose BTrees.family32.II, BTrees.family32.IF or BTrees.family32.IO.

  • If the tokens are 64 bit ints, choose BTrees.family64.II, BTrees.family64.IF or BTrees.family64.IO.

  • If they are anything else, choose BTrees.family32.OI, BTrees.family64.OI, or BTrees.family32.OO (or BTrees.family64.OO–they are the same).

Within these rules, the choice is somewhat arbitrary unless you plan to merge these results with that of another source that is using a particular BTree module. BTree set operations only work within the same module, so you must match module to module. The catalog defaults to IF trees, because that’s what standard zope catalogs use. That’s as reasonable a choice as any, and will potentially come in handy if your tokens are in fact the same as those used by the zope catalog and you want to do some set operations.

In this example, our tokens are strings, so we want OO or an OI variant. We’ll choose BTrees.family32.OI, arbitrarily.

>>> import zc.relation.catalog
>>> import BTrees
>>> catalog = zc.relation.catalog.Catalog(dumpEmployees, loadEmployees,
...                                       btree=BTrees.family32.OI)

[1] [2] Look! A relation catalog! We can’t do very much searching with it so far though, because the catalog doesn’t have any indexes.

In this example, the relation itself represents the employee, so we won’t need to index that separately.

But we do need a way to tell the catalog how to find the other end of the relation, the supervisor. You can specify this to the catalog with an attribute or method specified from zope.interface Interface, or with a callable. We’ll use a callable for now. The callable will receive the indexed relation and the catalog for context.

>>> def supervisor(emp, catalog):
...     return emp.supervisor # None or another employee
...

We’ll also need to specify how to tokenize (dump and load) those values. In this case, we’re able to use the same functions as the relations themselves. However, do note that we can specify a completely different way to dump and load for each “value index,” or relation element.

We could also specify the name to call the index, but it will default to the __name__ of the function (or interface element), which will work just fine for us now.

Now we can add the “supervisor” value index.

>>> catalog.addValueIndex(supervisor, dumpEmployees, loadEmployees,
...                       btree=BTrees.family32.OI)

Now we have an index [3].

>>> [info['name'] for info in catalog.iterValueIndexInfo()]
['supervisor']

Adding Relations

Now let’s create a few employees. All but one will have supervisors. If you recall our toy Employee class, the first argument to the constructor is the employee name (and therefore the token), and the optional second argument is the supervisor.

>>> a = Employee('Alice')
>>> b = Employee('Betty', a)
>>> c = Employee('Chuck', a)
>>> d = Employee('Diane', b)
>>> e = Employee('Edgar', b)
>>> f = Employee('Frank', c)
>>> g = Employee('Galyn', c)
>>> h = Employee('Howie', d)

Here is a diagram of the hierarchy.

            Alice
         __/     \__
    Betty           Chuck
    /   \           /   \
Diane   Edgar   Frank   Galyn
  |
Howie

Let’s tell the catalog about the relations, using the index method.

>>> for emp in (a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h):
...     catalog.index(emp)
...

We’ve now created the relation catalog and added relations to it. We’re ready to search!

Searching

In this section, we will introduce the following ideas.

  • Queries to the relation catalog are formed with dicts.

  • Query keys are the names of the indexes you want to search, or, for the special case of precise relations, the zc.relation.RELATION constant.

  • Query values are the tokens of the results you want to match; or None, indicating relations that have None as a value (or an empty collection, if it is a multiple). Search values can use zc.relation.catalog.any(args) or zc.relation.catalog.Any(args) to specify multiple (non-None) results to match for a given key.

  • The index has a variety of methods to help you work with tokens. tokenizeQuery is typically the most used, though others are available.

  • To find relations that match a query, use findRelations or findRelationTokens.

  • To find values that match a query, use findValues or findValueTokens.

  • You search transitively by using a query factory. The zc.relation.queryfactory.TransposingTransitive is a good common case factory that lets you walk up and down a hierarchy. A query factory can be passed in as an argument to search methods as a queryFactory, or installed as a default behavior using addDefaultQueryFactory.

  • To find how a query is related, use findRelationChains or findRelationTokenChains.

  • To find out if a query is related, use canFind.

  • Circular transitive relations are handled to prevent infinite loops. They are identified in findRelationChains and findRelationTokenChains with a zc.relation.interfaces.ICircularRelationPath marker interface.

  • search methods share the following arguments:

    • maxDepth, limiting the transitive depth for searches;

    • filter, allowing code to filter transitive paths;

    • targetQuery, allowing a query to filter transitive paths on the basis of the endpoint;

    • targetFilter, allowing code to filter transitive paths on the basis of the endpoint; and

    • queryFactory, mentioned above.

  • You can set up search indexes to speed up specific transitive searches.

Queries, findRelations, and special query values

So who works for Alice? That means we want to get the relations–the employees–with a supervisor of Alice.

The heart of a question to the catalog is a query. A query is spelled as a dictionary. The main idea is simply that keys in a dictionary specify index names, and the values specify the constraints.

The values in a query are always expressed with tokens. The catalog has several helpers to make this less onerous, but for now let’s take advantage of the fact that our tokens are easily comprehensible.

>>> sorted(catalog.findRelations({'supervisor': 'Alice'}))
[<Employee instance "Betty">, <Employee instance "Chuck">]

Alice is the direct (intransitive) boss of Betty and Chuck.

What if you want to ask “who doesn’t report to anyone?” Then you want to ask for a relation in which the supervisor is None.

>>> list(catalog.findRelations({'supervisor': None}))
[<Employee instance "Alice">]

Alice is the only employee who doesn’t report to anyone.

What if you want to ask “who reports to Diane or Chuck?” Then you use the zc.relation Any class or any function to pass the multiple values.

>>> sorted(catalog.findRelations(
...     {'supervisor': zc.relation.catalog.any('Diane', 'Chuck')}))
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[<Employee instance "Frank">, <Employee instance "Galyn">,
 <Employee instance "Howie">]

Frank, Galyn, and Howie each report to either Diane or Chuck. [4]

findValues and the RELATION query key

So how do we find who an employee’s supervisor is? Well, in this case, look at the attribute on the employee! If you can use an attribute that will usually be a win in the ZODB.

>>> h.supervisor
<Employee instance "Diane">

Again, as we mentioned at the start of this first example, the knowledge of a supervisor is “intrinsic” to the employee instance. It is possible, and even easy, to ask the catalog this kind of question, but the catalog syntax is more geared to “extrinsic” relations, such as the one from the supervisor to the employee: the connection between a supervisor object and its employees is extrinsic to the supervisor, so you actually might want a catalog to find it!

However, we will explore the syntax very briefly, because it introduces an important pair of search methods, and because it is a stepping stone to our first transitive search.

So, o relation catalog, who is Howie’s supervisor?

To ask this question we want to get the indexed values off of the relations: findValues. In its simplest form, the arguments are the index name of the values you want, and a query to find the relations that have the desired values.

What about the query? Above, we noted that the keys in a query are the names of the indexes to search. However, in this case, we don’t want to search one or more indexes for matching relations, as usual, but actually specify a relation: Howie.

We do not have a value index name: we are looking for a relation. The query key, then, should be the constant zc.relation.RELATION. For our current example, that would mean the query is {zc.relation.RELATION: 'Howie'}.

>>> import zc.relation
>>> list(catalog.findValues(
...     'supervisor', {zc.relation.RELATION: 'Howie'}))[0]
<Employee instance "Diane">

Congratulations, you just found an obfuscated and comparitively inefficient way to write howie.supervisor! [5] [6]

Slightly more usefully, you can use other query keys along with zc.relation.RELATION. This asks, “Of Betty, Alice, and Frank, who are supervised by Alice?”

>>> sorted(catalog.findRelations(
...     {zc.relation.RELATION: zc.relation.catalog.any(
...         'Betty', 'Alice', 'Frank'),
...      'supervisor': 'Alice'}))
[<Employee instance "Betty">]

Only Betty is.

Tokens

As mentioned above, the catalog provides several helpers to work with tokens. The most frequently used is tokenizeQuery, which takes a query with object values and converts them to tokens using the “dump” functions registered for the relations and indexed values. Here are alternate spellings of some of the queries we’ve encountered above.

>>> catalog.tokenizeQuery({'supervisor': a})
{'supervisor': 'Alice'}
>>> catalog.tokenizeQuery({'supervisor': None})
{'supervisor': None}
>>> import pprint
>>> catalog.tokenizeQuery(
...     {zc.relation.RELATION: zc.relation.catalog.any(a, b, f),
...     'supervisor': a}) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
{None: <zc.relation.catalog.Any instance ('Alice', 'Betty', 'Frank')>,
'supervisor': 'Alice'}

(If you are wondering about that None in the last result, yes, zc.relation.RELATION is just readability sugar for None.)

So, here’s a real search using tokenizeQuery. We’ll make an alias for catalog.tokenizeQuery just to shorten things up a bit.

>>> query = catalog.tokenizeQuery
>>> sorted(catalog.findRelations(query(
...     {zc.relation.RELATION: zc.relation.catalog.any(a, b, f),
...      'supervisor': a})))
[<Employee instance "Betty">]

The catalog always has parallel search methods, one for finding objects, as seen above, and one for finding tokens (the only exception is canFind, described below). Finding tokens can be much more efficient, especially if the result from the relation catalog is just one step along the path of finding your desired result. But finding objects is simpler for some common cases. Here’s a quick example of some queries above, getting tokens rather than objects.

You can also spell a query in tokenizeQuery with keyword arguments. This won’t work if your key is zc.relation.RELATION, but otherwise it can improve readability. We’ll see some examples of this below as well.

>>> sorted(catalog.findRelationTokens(query(supervisor=a)))
['Betty', 'Chuck']
>>> sorted(catalog.findRelationTokens({'supervisor': None}))
['Alice']
>>> sorted(catalog.findRelationTokens(
...     query(supervisor=zc.relation.catalog.any(c, d))))
['Frank', 'Galyn', 'Howie']
>>> sorted(catalog.findRelationTokens(
...     query({zc.relation.RELATION: zc.relation.catalog.any(a, b, f),
...            'supervisor': a})))
['Betty']

The catalog provides several other methods just for working with tokens.

  • resolveQuery: the inverse of tokenizeQuery, converting a tokenizedquery to a query with objects.

  • tokenizeValues: returns an iterable of tokens for the values of the given index name.

  • resolveValueTokens: returns an iterable of values for the tokens of the given index name.

  • tokenizeRelation: returns a token for the given relation.

  • resolveRelationToken: returns a relation for the given token.

  • tokenizeRelations: returns an iterable of tokens for the relations given.

  • resolveRelationTokens: returns an iterable of relations for the tokens given.

These methods are lesser used, and described in more technical documents in this package.

Transitive Searching, Query Factories, and maxDepth

So, we’ve seen a lot of one-level, intransitive searching. What about transitive searching? Well, you need to tell the catalog how to walk the tree. In simple (and very common) cases like this, the zc.relation.queryfactory.TransposingTransitive will do the trick.

A transitive query factory is just a callable that the catalog uses to ask “I got this query, and here are the results I found. I’m supposed to walk another step transitively, so what query should I search for next?” Writing a factory is more complex than we want to talk about right now, but using the TransposingTransitiveQueryFactory is easy. You just tell it the two query names it should transpose for walking in either direction.

For instance, here we just want to tell the factory to transpose the two keys we’ve used, zc.relation.RELATION and ‘supervisor’. Let’s make a factory, use it in a query for a couple of transitive searches, and then, if you want, you can read through a footnote to talk through what is happening.

Here’s the factory.

>>> import zc.relation.queryfactory
>>> factory = zc.relation.queryfactory.TransposingTransitive(
...     zc.relation.RELATION, 'supervisor')

Now factory is just a callable. Let’s let it help answer a couple of questions.

Who are all of Howie’s supervisors transitively (this looks up in the diagram)?

>>> list(catalog.findValues('supervisor', {zc.relation.RELATION: 'Howie'},
...      queryFactory=factory))
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[<Employee instance "Diane">, <Employee instance "Betty">,
 <Employee instance "Alice">]

Who are all of the people Betty supervises transitively, breadth first (this looks down in the diagram)?

>>> people = list(catalog.findRelations(
...     {'supervisor': 'Betty'}, queryFactory=factory))
>>> sorted(people[:2])
[<Employee instance "Diane">, <Employee instance "Edgar">]
>>> people[2]
<Employee instance "Howie">

Yup, that looks right. So how did that work? If you care, read this footnote. [7]

This transitive factory is really the only transitive factory you would want for this particular catalog, so it probably is safe to wire it in as a default. You can add multiple query factories to match different queries using addDefaultQueryFactory.

>>> catalog.addDefaultQueryFactory(factory)

Now all searches are transitive by default.

>>> list(catalog.findValues('supervisor', {zc.relation.RELATION: 'Howie'}))
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[<Employee instance "Diane">, <Employee instance "Betty">,
 <Employee instance "Alice">]
>>> people = list(catalog.findRelations({'supervisor': 'Betty'}))
>>> sorted(people[:2])
[<Employee instance "Diane">, <Employee instance "Edgar">]
>>> people[2]
<Employee instance "Howie">

We can force a non-transitive search, or a specific search depth, with maxDepth [8].

>>> list(catalog.findValues(
...     'supervisor', {zc.relation.RELATION: 'Howie'}, maxDepth=1))
[<Employee instance "Diane">]
>>> sorted(catalog.findRelations({'supervisor': 'Betty'}, maxDepth=1))
[<Employee instance "Diane">, <Employee instance "Edgar">]

[9] We’ll introduce some other available search arguments later in this document and in other documents. It’s important to note that all search methods share the same arguments as ``findRelations``. findValues and findValueTokens only add the initial argument of specifying the desired value.

We’ve looked at two search methods so far: the findValues and findRelations methods help you ask what is related. But what if you want to know how things are transitively related?

findRelationChains and targetQuery

Another search method, findRelationChains, helps you discover how things are transitively related.

The method name says “find relation chains”. But what is a “relation chain”? In this API, it is a transitive path of relations. For instance, what’s the chain of command above Howie? findRelationChains will return each unique path.

>>> list(catalog.findRelationChains({zc.relation.RELATION: 'Howie'}))
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[(<Employee instance "Howie">,),
 (<Employee instance "Howie">, <Employee instance "Diane">),
 (<Employee instance "Howie">, <Employee instance "Diane">,
  <Employee instance "Betty">),
 (<Employee instance "Howie">, <Employee instance "Diane">,
 <Employee instance "Betty">, <Employee instance "Alice">)]

Look at that result carefully. Notice that the result is an iterable of tuples. Each tuple is a unique chain, which may be a part of a subsequent chain. In this case, the last chain is the longest and the most comprehensive.

What if we wanted to see all the paths from Alice? That will be one chain for each supervised employee, because it shows all possible paths.

>>> sorted(catalog.findRelationChains(
...     {'supervisor': 'Alice'}))
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[(<Employee instance "Betty">,),
 (<Employee instance "Betty">, <Employee instance "Diane">),
 (<Employee instance "Betty">, <Employee instance "Diane">,
  <Employee instance "Howie">),
 (<Employee instance "Betty">, <Employee instance "Edgar">),
 (<Employee instance "Chuck">,),
 (<Employee instance "Chuck">, <Employee instance "Frank">),
 (<Employee instance "Chuck">, <Employee instance "Galyn">)]

That’s all the paths–all the chains–from Alice. We sorted the results, but normally they would be breadth first.

But what if we wanted to just find the paths from one query result to another query result–say, we wanted to know the chain of command from Alice down to Howie? Then we can specify a targetQuery that specifies the characteristics of our desired end point (or points).

>>> list(catalog.findRelationChains(
...     {'supervisor': 'Alice'},
...     targetQuery={zc.relation.RELATION: 'Howie'}))
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[(<Employee instance "Betty">, <Employee instance "Diane">,
  <Employee instance "Howie">)]

So, Betty supervises Diane, who supervises Howie.

Note that targetQuery now joins maxDepth in our collection of shared search arguments that we have introduced.

filter and targetFilter

We can take a quick look now at the last of the two shared search arguments: filter and targetFilter. These two are similar in that they both are callables that can approve or reject given relations in a search based on whatever logic you can code. They differ in that filter stops any further transitive searches from the relation, while targetFilter merely omits the given result but allows further search from it. Like targetQuery, then, targetFilter is good when you want to specify the other end of a path.

As an example, let’s say we only want to return female employees.

>>> female_employees = ('Alice', 'Betty', 'Diane', 'Galyn')
>>> def female_filter(relchain, query, catalog, cache):
...     return relchain[-1] in female_employees
...

Here are all the female employees supervised by Alice transitively, using targetFilter.

>>> list(catalog.findRelations({'supervisor': 'Alice'},
...                            targetFilter=female_filter))
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[<Employee instance "Betty">, <Employee instance "Diane">,
 <Employee instance "Galyn">]

Here are all the female employees supervised by Chuck.

>>> list(catalog.findRelations({'supervisor': 'Chuck'},
...                            targetFilter=female_filter))
[<Employee instance "Galyn">]

The same method used as a filter will only return females directly supervised by other females–not Galyn, in this case.

>>> list(catalog.findRelations({'supervisor': 'Alice'},
...                            filter=female_filter))
[<Employee instance "Betty">, <Employee instance "Diane">]

These can be combined with one another, and with the other search arguments [10].

Search indexes

Without setting up any additional indexes, the transitive behavior of the findRelations and findValues methods essentially relies on the brute force searches of findRelationChains. Results are iterables that are gradually computed. For instance, let’s repeat the question “Whom does Betty supervise?”. Notice that res first populates a list with three members, but then does not populate a second list. The iterator has been exhausted.

>>> res = catalog.findRelationTokens({'supervisor': 'Betty'})
>>> unindexed = sorted(res)
>>> len(unindexed)
3
>>> len(list(res)) # iterator is exhausted
0

The brute force of this approach can be sufficient in many cases, but sometimes speed for these searches is critical. In these cases, you can add a “search index”. A search index speeds up the result of one or more precise searches by indexing the results. Search indexes can affect the results of searches with a queryFactory in findRelations, findValues, and the soon-to-be-introduced canFind, but they do not affect findRelationChains.

The zc.relation package currently includes two kinds of search indexes, one for indexing transitive membership searches in a hierarchy and one for intransitive searches explored in tokens.txt in this package, which can optimize frequent searches on complex queries or can effectively change the meaning of an intransitive search. Other search index implementations and approaches may be added in the future.

Here’s a very brief example of adding a search index for the transitive searches seen above that specify a ‘supervisor’.

>>> import zc.relation.searchindex
>>> catalog.addSearchIndex(
...     zc.relation.searchindex.TransposingTransitiveMembership(
...         'supervisor', zc.relation.RELATION))

The zc.relation.RELATION describes how to walk back up the chain. Search indexes are explained in reasonable detail in searchindex.txt.

Now that we have added the index, we can search again. The result this time is already computed, so, at least when you ask for tokens, it is repeatable.

>>> res = catalog.findRelationTokens({'supervisor': 'Betty'})
>>> len(list(res))
3
>>> len(list(res))
3
>>> sorted(res) == unindexed
True

Note that the breadth-first sorting is lost when an index is used [11].

Transitive cycles (and updating and removing relations)

The transitive searches and the provided search indexes can handle cycles. Cycles are less likely in the current example than some others, but we can stretch the case a bit: imagine a “king in disguise”, in which someone at the top works lower in the hierarchy. Perhaps Alice works for Zane, who works for Betty, who works for Alice. Artificial, but easy enough to draw:

      ______
     /      \
    /     Zane
   /        |
  /       Alice
 /     __/     \__
/ Betty__         Chuck
\-/  /   \         /   \
   Diane Edgar Frank   Galyn
    |
  Howie

Easy to create too.

>>> z = Employee('Zane', b)
>>> a.supervisor = z

Now we have a cycle. Of course, we have not yet told the catalog about it. index can be used both to reindex Alice and index Zane.

>>> catalog.index(a)
>>> catalog.index(z)

Now, if we ask who works for Betty, we get the entire tree. (We’ll ask for tokens, just so that the result is smaller to look at.) [12]

>>> sorted(catalog.findRelationTokens({'supervisor': 'Betty'}))
... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
['Alice', 'Betty', 'Chuck', 'Diane', 'Edgar', 'Frank', 'Galyn', 'Howie',
 'Zane']

If we ask for the supervisors of Frank, it will include Betty.

>>> list(catalog.findValueTokens(
...     'supervisor', {zc.relation.RELATION: 'Frank'}))
['Chuck', 'Alice', 'Zane', 'Betty']

Paths returned by findRelationChains are marked with special interfaces, and special metadata, to show the chain.

>>> res = list(catalog.findRelationChains({zc.relation.RELATION: 'Frank'}))
>>> len(res)
5
>>> import zc.relation.interfaces
>>> [zc.relation.interfaces.ICircularRelationPath.providedBy(r)
...  for r in res]
[False, False, False, False, True]

Here’s the last chain:

>>> res[-1] # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
cycle(<Employee instance "Frank">, <Employee instance "Chuck">,
      <Employee instance "Alice">, <Employee instance "Zane">,
      <Employee instance "Betty">)

The chain’s ‘cycled’ attribute has a list of queries that create a cycle. If you run the query, or queries, you see where the cycle would restart–where the path would have started to overlap. Sometimes the query results will include multiple cycles, and some paths that are not cycles. In this case, there’s only a single cycled query, which results in a single cycled relation.

>>> len(res[4].cycled)
1
>>> list(catalog.findRelations(res[4].cycled[0], maxDepth=1))
[<Employee instance "Alice">]

To remove this craziness [13], we can unindex Zane, and change and reindex Alice.

>>> a.supervisor = None
>>> catalog.index(a)
>>> list(catalog.findValueTokens(
...     'supervisor', {zc.relation.RELATION: 'Frank'}))
['Chuck', 'Alice']
>>> catalog.unindex(z)
>>> sorted(catalog.findRelationTokens({'supervisor': 'Betty'}))
['Diane', 'Edgar', 'Howie']

canFind

We’re to the last search method: canFind. We’ve gotten values and relations, but what if you simply want to know if there is any connection at all? For instance, is Alice a supervisor of Howie? Is Chuck? To answer these questions, you can use the canFind method combined with the targetQuery search argument.

The canFind method takes the same arguments as findRelations. However, it simply returns a boolean about whether the search has any results. This is a convenience that also allows some extra optimizations.

Does Betty supervise anyone?

>>> catalog.canFind({'supervisor': 'Betty'})
True

What about Howie?

>>> catalog.canFind({'supervisor': 'Howie'})
False

What about…Zane (no longer an employee)?

>>> catalog.canFind({'supervisor': 'Zane'})
False

If we want to know if Alice or Chuck supervise Howie, then we want to specify characteristics of two points on a path. To ask a question about the other end of a path, use targetQuery.

Is Alice a supervisor of Howie?

>>> catalog.canFind({'supervisor': 'Alice'},
...                 targetQuery={zc.relation.RELATION: 'Howie'})
True

Is Chuck a supervisor of Howie?

>>> catalog.canFind({'supervisor': 'Chuck'},
...                 targetQuery={zc.relation.RELATION: 'Howie'})
False

Is Howie Alice’s employee?

>>> catalog.canFind({zc.relation.RELATION: 'Howie'},
...                 targetQuery={'supervisor': 'Alice'})
True

Is Howie Chuck’s employee?

>>> catalog.canFind({zc.relation.RELATION: 'Howie'},
...                 targetQuery={'supervisor': 'Chuck'})
False

(Note that, if your relations describe a hierarchy, searching up a hierarchy is usually more efficient than searching down, so the second pair of questions is generally preferable to the first in that case.)

Working with More Complex Relations

So far, our examples have used a simple relation, in which the indexed object is one end of the relation, and the indexed value on the object is the other. This example has let us look at all of the basic zc.relation catalog functionality.

As mentioned in the introduction, though, the catalog supports, and was designed for, more complex relations. This section will quickly examine a few examples of other uses.

In this section, we will see several examples of ideas mentioned above but not yet demonstrated.

  • We can use interface attributes (values or callables) to define value indexes.

  • Using interface attributes will cause an attempt to adapt the relation if it does not already provide the interface.

  • We can use the multiple argument when defining a value index to indicate that the indexed value is a collection.

  • We can use the name argument when defining a value index to specify the name to be used in queries, rather than relying on the name of the interface attribute or callable.

  • The family argument in instantiating the catalog lets you change the default btree family for relations and value indexes from BTrees.family32.IF to BTrees.family64.IF.

Extrinsic Two-Way Relations

A simple variation of our current story is this: what if the indexed relation were between two other objects–that is, what if the relation were extrinsic to both participants?

Let’s imagine we have relations that show biological parentage. We’ll want a “Person” and a “Parentage” relation. We’ll define an interface for IParentage so we can see how using an interface to define a value index works.

>>> class Person(object):
...     def __init__(self, name):
...         self.name = name
...     def __repr__(self):
...         return '<Person %r>' % (self.name,)
...
>>> import zope.interface
>>> class IParentage(zope.interface.Interface):
...     child = zope.interface.Attribute('the child')
...     parents = zope.interface.Attribute('the parents')
...
>>> class Parentage(object):
...     zope.interface.implements(IParentage)
...     def __init__(self, child, parent1, parent2):
...         self.child = child
...         self.parents = (parent1, parent2)
...

Now we’ll define the dumpers and loaders and then the catalog. Notice that we are relying on a pattern: the dump must be called before the load.

>>> _people = {}
>>> _relations = {}
>>> def dumpPeople(obj, catalog, cache):
...     if _people.setdefault(obj.name, obj) is not obj:
...         raise ValueError('we are assuming names are unique')
...     return obj.name
...
>>> def loadPeople(token, catalog, cache):
...     return _people[token]
...
>>> def dumpRelations(obj, catalog, cache):
...     if _relations.setdefault(id(obj), obj) is not obj:
...         raise ValueError('huh?')
...     return id(obj)
...
>>> def loadRelations(token, catalog, cache):
...     return _relations[token]
...
>>> catalog = zc.relation.catalog.Catalog(dumpRelations, loadRelations)
>>> catalog.addValueIndex(IParentage['child'], dumpPeople, loadPeople,
...                       btree=BTrees.family32.OO)
>>> catalog.addValueIndex(IParentage['parents'], dumpPeople, loadPeople,
...                       btree=BTrees.family32.OO, multiple=True,
...                       name='parent')
>>> catalog.addDefaultQueryFactory(
...     zc.relation.queryfactory.TransposingTransitive(
...         'child', 'parent'))

Now we have a catalog fully set up. Let’s add some relations.

>>> a = Person('Alice')
>>> b = Person('Betty')
>>> c = Person('Charles')
>>> d = Person('Donald')
>>> e = Person('Eugenia')
>>> f = Person('Fred')
>>> g = Person('Gertrude')
>>> h = Person('Harry')
>>> i = Person('Iphigenia')
>>> j = Person('Jacob')
>>> k = Person('Karyn')
>>> l = Person('Lee')
>>> r1 = Parentage(child=j, parent1=k, parent2=l)
>>> r2 = Parentage(child=g, parent1=i, parent2=j)
>>> r3 = Parentage(child=f, parent1=g, parent2=h)
>>> r4 = Parentage(child=e, parent1=g, parent2=h)
>>> r5 = Parentage(child=b, parent1=e, parent2=d)
>>> r6 = Parentage(child=a, parent1=e, parent2=c)

Here’s that in one of our hierarchy diagrams.

Karyn   Lee
     \ /
    Jacob   Iphigenia
         \ /
        Gertrude    Harry
                \  /
             /-------\
         Fred        Eugenia
           Donald   /     \    Charles
                 \ /       \  /
                Betty      Alice

Now we can index the relations, and ask some questions.

>>> for r in (r1, r2, r3, r4, r5, r6):
...     catalog.index(r)
>>> query = catalog.tokenizeQuery
>>> sorted(catalog.findValueTokens(
...     'parent', query(child=a), maxDepth=1))
['Charles', 'Eugenia']
>>> sorted(catalog.findValueTokens('parent', query(child=g)))
['Iphigenia', 'Jacob', 'Karyn', 'Lee']
>>> sorted(catalog.findValueTokens(
...     'child', query(parent=h), maxDepth=1))
['Eugenia', 'Fred']
>>> sorted(catalog.findValueTokens('child', query(parent=h)))
['Alice', 'Betty', 'Eugenia', 'Fred']
>>> catalog.canFind(query(parent=h), targetQuery=query(child=d))
False
>>> catalog.canFind(query(parent=l), targetQuery=query(child=b))
True

Multi-Way Relations

The previous example quickly showed how to set the catalog up for a completely extrinsic two-way relation. The same pattern can be extended for N-way relations. For example, consider a four way relation in the form of SUBJECTS PREDICATE OBJECTS [in CONTEXT]. For instance, we might want to say “(joe,) SELLS (doughnuts, coffee) in corner_store”, where “(joe,)” is the collection of subjects, “SELLS” is the predicate, “(doughnuts, coffee)” is the collection of objects, and “corner_store” is the optional context.

For this last example, we’ll integrate two components we haven’t seen examples of here before: the ZODB and adaptation.

Our example ZODB approach uses OIDs as the tokens. this might be OK in some cases, if you will never support multiple databases and you don’t need an abstraction layer so that a different object can have the same identifier.

>>> import persistent
>>> import struct
>>> class Demo(persistent.Persistent):
...     def __init__(self, name):
...         self.name = name
...     def __repr__(self):
...         return '<Demo instance %r>' % (self.name,)
...
>>> class IRelation(zope.interface.Interface):
...     subjects = zope.interface.Attribute('subjects')
...     predicate = zope.interface.Attribute('predicate')
...     objects = zope.interface.Attribute('objects')
...
>>> class IContextual(zope.interface.Interface):
...     def getContext():
...         'return context'
...     def setContext(value):
...         'set context'
...
>>> class Contextual(object):
...     zope.interface.implements(IContextual)
...     _context = None
...     def getContext(self):
...         return self._context
...     def setContext(self, value):
...         self._context = value
...
>>> class Relation(persistent.Persistent):
...     zope.interface.implements(IRelation)
...     def __init__(self, subjects, predicate, objects):
...         self.subjects = subjects
...         self.predicate = predicate
...         self.objects = objects
...         self._contextual = Contextual()
...
...     def __conform__(self, iface):
...         if iface is IContextual:
...             return self._contextual
...

(When using zope.component, the __conform__ would normally be unnecessary; however, this package does not depend on zope.component.)

>>> def dumpPersistent(obj, catalog, cache):
...     if obj._p_jar is None:
...         catalog._p_jar.add(obj) # assumes something else places it
...     return struct.unpack('<q', obj._p_oid)[0]
...
>>> def loadPersistent(token, catalog, cache):
...     return catalog._p_jar.get(struct.pack('<q', token))
...
>>> from ZODB.tests.util import DB
>>> db = DB()
>>> conn = db.open()
>>> root = conn.root()
>>> catalog = root['catalog'] = zc.relation.catalog.Catalog(
...     dumpPersistent, loadPersistent, family=BTrees.family64)
>>> catalog.addValueIndex(IRelation['subjects'],
...     dumpPersistent, loadPersistent, multiple=True, name='subject')
>>> catalog.addValueIndex(IRelation['objects'],
...     dumpPersistent, loadPersistent, multiple=True, name='object')
>>> catalog.addValueIndex(IRelation['predicate'], btree=BTrees.family32.OO)
>>> catalog.addValueIndex(IContextual['getContext'],
...     dumpPersistent, loadPersistent, name='context')
>>> import transaction
>>> transaction.commit()

The dumpPersistent and loadPersistent is a bit of a toy, as warned above. Also, while our predicate will be stored as a string, some programmers may prefer to have a dump in such a case verify that the string has been explicitly registered in some way, to prevent typos. Obviously, we are not bothering with this for our example.

We make some objects, and then we make some relations with those objects and index them.

>>> joe = root['joe'] = Demo('joe')
>>> sara = root['sara'] = Demo('sara')
>>> jack = root['jack'] = Demo('jack')
>>> ann = root['ann'] = Demo('ann')
>>> doughnuts = root['doughnuts'] = Demo('doughnuts')
>>> coffee = root['coffee'] = Demo('coffee')
>>> muffins = root['muffins'] = Demo('muffins')
>>> cookies = root['cookies'] = Demo('cookies')
>>> newspaper = root['newspaper'] = Demo('newspaper')
>>> corner_store = root['corner_store'] = Demo('corner_store')
>>> bistro = root['bistro'] = Demo('bistro')
>>> bakery = root['bakery'] = Demo('bakery')
>>> SELLS = 'SELLS'
>>> BUYS = 'BUYS'
>>> OBSERVES = 'OBSERVES'
>>> rel1 = root['rel1'] = Relation((joe,), SELLS, (doughnuts, coffee))
>>> IContextual(rel1).setContext(corner_store)
>>> rel2 = root['rel2'] = Relation((sara, jack), SELLS,
...                                (muffins, doughnuts, cookies))
>>> IContextual(rel2).setContext(bakery)
>>> rel3 = root['rel3'] = Relation((ann,), BUYS, (doughnuts,))
>>> rel4 = root['rel4'] = Relation((sara,), BUYS, (bistro,))
>>> for r in (rel1, rel2, rel3, rel4):
...     catalog.index(r)
...

Now we can ask a simple question. Where do they sell doughnuts?

>>> query = catalog.tokenizeQuery
>>> sorted(catalog.findValues(
...     'context',
...     (query(predicate=SELLS, object=doughnuts))),
...     key=lambda ob: ob.name)
[<Demo instance 'bakery'>, <Demo instance 'corner_store'>]

Hopefully these examples give you further ideas on how you can use this tool.

Additional Functionality

This section introduces peripheral functionality. We will learn the following.

  • Listeners can be registered in the catalog. They are alerted when a relation is added, modified, or removed; and when the catalog is cleared and copied (see below).

  • The clear method clears the relations in the catalog.

  • The copy method makes a copy of the current catalog by copying internal data structures, rather than reindexing the relations, which can be a significant optimization opportunity. This copies value indexes and search indexes; and gives listeners an opportunity to specify what, if anything, should be included in the new copy.

  • The ignoreSearchIndex argument to the five pertinent search methods causes the search to ignore search indexes, even if there is an appropriate one.

  • findRelationTokens() (without arguments) returns the BTree set of all relation tokens in the catalog.

  • findValueTokens(INDEX_NAME) (where “INDEX_NAME” should be replaced with an index name) returns the BTree set of all value tokens in the catalog for the given index name.

Listeners

A variety of potential clients may want to be alerted when the catalog changes. zc.relation does not depend on zope.event, so listeners may be registered for various changes. Let’s make a quick demo listener. The additions and removals arguments are dictionaries of {value name: iterable of added or removed value tokens}.

>>> def pchange(d):
...     pprint.pprint(dict(
...         (k, v is not None and set(v) or v) for k, v in d.items()))
>>> class DemoListener(persistent.Persistent):
...     zope.interface.implements(zc.relation.interfaces.IListener)
...     def relationAdded(self, token, catalog, additions):
...         print ('a relation (token %r) was added to %r '
...                'with these values:' % (token, catalog))
...         pchange(additions)
...     def relationModified(self, token, catalog, additions, removals):
...         print ('a relation (token %r) in %r was modified '
...                'with these additions:' % (token, catalog))
...         pchange(additions)
...         print 'and these removals:'
...         pchange(removals)
...     def relationRemoved(self, token, catalog, removals):
...         print ('a relation (token %r) was removed from %r '
...                'with these values:' % (token, catalog))
...         pchange(removals)
...     def sourceCleared(self, catalog):
...         print 'catalog %r had all relations unindexed' % (catalog,)
...     def sourceAdded(self, catalog):
...         print 'now listening to catalog %r' % (catalog,)
...     def sourceRemoved(self, catalog):
...         print 'no longer listening to catalog %r' % (catalog,)
...     def sourceCopied(self, original, copy):
...         print 'catalog %r made a copy %r' % (catalog, copy)
...         copy.addListener(self)
...

Listeners can be installed multiple times.

Listeners can be added as persistent weak references, so that, if they are deleted elsewhere, a ZODB pack will not consider the reference in the catalog to be something preventing garbage collection.

We’ll install one of these demo listeners into our new catalog as a normal reference, the default behavior. Then we’ll show some example messages sent to the demo listener.

>>> listener = DemoListener()
>>> catalog.addListener(listener) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
now listening to catalog <zc.relation.catalog.Catalog object at ...>
>>> rel5 = root['rel5'] = Relation((ann,), OBSERVES, (newspaper,))
>>> catalog.index(rel5) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
a relation (token ...) was added to <...Catalog...> with these values:
{'context': None,
 'object': set([...]),
 'predicate': set(['OBSERVES']),
 'subject': set([...])}
>>> rel5.subjects = (jack,)
>>> IContextual(rel5).setContext(bistro)
>>> catalog.index(rel5) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
a relation (token ...) in ...Catalog... was modified with these additions:
{'context': set([...]),
 'subject': set([...])}
and these removals:
{'subject': set([...])}
>>> catalog.unindex(rel5) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
a relation (token ...) was removed from <...Catalog...> with these values:
{'context': set([...]),
 'object': set([...]),
 'predicate': set(['OBSERVES']),
 'subject': set([...])}
>>> catalog.removeListener(listener) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
no longer listening to catalog <...Catalog...>
>>> catalog.index(rel5) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS

The only two methods not shown by those examples are sourceCleared and sourceCopied. We’ll get to those very soon below.

The clear Method

The clear method simply indexes all relations from a catalog. Installed listeners have sourceCleared called.

>>> len(catalog)
5
>>> catalog.addListener(listener) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
now listening to catalog <zc.relation.catalog.Catalog object at ...>
>>> catalog.clear() # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
catalog <...Catalog...> had all relations unindexed
>>> len(catalog)
0
>>> sorted(catalog.findValues(
...     'context',
...     (query(predicate=SELLS, object=doughnuts))),
...     key=lambda ob: ob.name)
[]

The copy Method

Sometimes you may want to copy a relation catalog. One way of doing this is to create a new catalog, set it up like the current one, and then reindex all the same relations. This is unnecessarily slow for programmer and computer. The copy method makes a new catalog with the same corpus of indexed relations by copying internal data structures.

Search indexes are requested to make new copies of themselves for the new catalog; and listeners are given an opportunity to react as desired to the new copy, including installing themselves, and/or another object of their choosing as a listener.

Let’s make a copy of a populated index with a search index and a listener. Notice in our listener that sourceCopied adds itself as a listener to the new copy. This is done at the very end of the copy process.

>>> for r in (rel1, rel2, rel3, rel4, rel5):
...     catalog.index(r)
... # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
a relation ... was added...
a relation ... was added...
a relation ... was added...
a relation ... was added...
a relation ... was added...
>>> BEGAT = 'BEGAT'
>>> rel6 = root['rel6'] = Relation((jack, ann), BEGAT, (sara,))
>>> henry = root['henry'] = Demo('henry')
>>> rel7 = root['rel7'] = Relation((sara, joe), BEGAT, (henry,))
>>> catalog.index(rel6) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
a relation (token ...) was added to <...Catalog...> with these values:
{'context': None,
 'object': set([...]),
 'predicate': set(['BEGAT']),
 'subject': set([..., ...])}
>>> catalog.index(rel7) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
a relation (token ...) was added to <...Catalog...> with these values:
{'context': None,
 'object': set([...]),
 'predicate': set(['BEGAT']),
 'subject': set([..., ...])}
>>> catalog.addDefaultQueryFactory(
...     zc.relation.queryfactory.TransposingTransitive(
...         'subject', 'object', {'predicate': BEGAT}))
...
>>> list(catalog.findValues(
...     'object', query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT)))
[<Demo instance 'sara'>, <Demo instance 'henry'>]
>>> catalog.addSearchIndex(
...     zc.relation.searchindex.TransposingTransitiveMembership(
...         'subject', 'object', static={'predicate': BEGAT}))
>>> sorted(
...     catalog.findValues(
...         'object', query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT)),
...     key=lambda o: o.name)
[<Demo instance 'henry'>, <Demo instance 'sara'>]
>>> newcat = root['newcat'] = catalog.copy() # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
catalog <...Catalog...> made a copy <...Catalog...>
now listening to catalog <...Catalog...>
>>> transaction.commit()

Now the copy has its own copies of internal data structures and of the searchindex. For example, let’s modify the relations and add a new one to the copy.

>>> mary = root['mary'] = Demo('mary')
>>> buffy = root['buffy'] = Demo('buffy')
>>> zack = root['zack'] = Demo('zack')
>>> rel7.objects += (mary,)
>>> rel8 = root['rel8'] = Relation((henry, buffy), BEGAT, (zack,))
>>> newcat.index(rel7) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
a relation (token ...) in ...Catalog... was modified with these additions:
{'object': set([...])}
and these removals:
{}
>>> newcat.index(rel8) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
a relation (token ...) was added to ...Catalog... with these values:
{'context': None,
 'object': set([...]),
 'predicate': set(['BEGAT']),
 'subject': set([..., ...])}
>>> len(newcat)
8
>>> sorted(
...     newcat.findValues(
...         'object', query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT)),
...     key=lambda o: o.name) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[<Demo instance 'henry'>, <Demo instance 'mary'>, <Demo instance 'sara'>,
 <Demo instance 'zack'>]
>>> sorted(
...     newcat.findValues(
...         'object', query(subject=sara)),
...     key=lambda o: o.name) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[<Demo instance 'bistro'>, <Demo instance 'cookies'>,
<Demo instance 'doughnuts'>, <Demo instance 'henry'>,
<Demo instance 'mary'>, <Demo instance 'muffins'>]

The original catalog is not modified.

>>> len(catalog)
7
>>> sorted(
...     catalog.findValues(
...         'object', query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT)),
...     key=lambda o: o.name)
[<Demo instance 'henry'>, <Demo instance 'sara'>]
>>> sorted(
...     catalog.findValues(
...         'object', query(subject=sara)),
...     key=lambda o: o.name) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
[<Demo instance 'bistro'>, <Demo instance 'cookies'>,
 <Demo instance 'doughnuts'>, <Demo instance 'henry'>,
 <Demo instance 'muffins'>]

The ignoreSearchIndex argument

The five methods that can use search indexes, findValues, findValueTokens, findRelations, findRelationTokens, and canFind, can be explicitly requested to ignore any pertinent search index using the ignoreSearchIndex argument.

We can see this easily with the token-related methods: the search index result will be a BTree set, while without the search index the result will be a generator.

>>> res1 = newcat.findValueTokens(
...     'object', query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT))
>>> res1 # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
LFSet([..., ..., ..., ...])
>>> res2 = newcat.findValueTokens(
...     'object', query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT),
...     ignoreSearchIndex=True)
>>> res2 # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
<generator object at 0x...>
>>> sorted(res2) == list(res1)
True
>>> res1 = newcat.findRelationTokens(
...     query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT))
>>> res1 # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
LFSet([..., ..., ...])
>>> res2 = newcat.findRelationTokens(
...     query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT), ignoreSearchIndex=True)
>>> res2 # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
<generator object at 0x...>
>>> sorted(res2) == list(res1)
True

We can see that the other methods take the argument, but the results look the same as usual.

>>> res = newcat.findValues(
...     'object', query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT),
...     ignoreSearchIndex=True)
>>> res # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
<generator object at 0x...>
>>> list(res) == list(newcat.resolveValueTokens(newcat.findValueTokens(
...     'object', query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT),
...     ignoreSearchIndex=True), 'object'))
True
>>> res = newcat.findRelations(
...     query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT),
...     ignoreSearchIndex=True)
>>> res # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
<generator object at 0x...>
>>> list(res) == list(newcat.resolveRelationTokens(
...     newcat.findRelationTokens(
...         query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT),
...         ignoreSearchIndex=True)))
True
>>> newcat.canFind(
...     query(subject=jack, predicate=BEGAT), ignoreSearchIndex=True)
True

findRelationTokens()

If you call findRelationTokens without any arguments, you will get the BTree set of all relation tokens in the catalog. This can be handy for tests and for advanced uses of the catalog.

>>> newcat.findRelationTokens() # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
<BTrees.LFBTree.LFTreeSet object at ...>
>>> len(newcat.findRelationTokens())
8
>>> set(newcat.resolveRelationTokens(newcat.findRelationTokens())) == set(
...     (rel1, rel2, rel3, rel4, rel5, rel6, rel7, rel8))
True

findValueTokens(INDEX_NAME)

If you call findValueTokens with only an index name, you will get the BTree structure of all tokens for that value in the index. This can be handy for tests and for advanced uses of the catalog.

>>> newcat.findValueTokens('predicate') # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
<BTrees.OOBTree.OOBTree object at ...>
>>> list(newcat.findValueTokens('predicate'))
['BEGAT', 'BUYS', 'OBSERVES', 'SELLS']

Conclusion

Review

That brings us to the end of our introductory examples. Let’s review, and then look at where you can go from here.

  • Relations are objects with indexed values.

  • The relation catalog indexes relations. The relations can be one-way, two-way, three-way, or N-way, as long as you tell the catalog to index the different values.

  • Creating a catalog:

    • Relations and their values are stored in the catalog as tokens: unique identifiers that you can resolve back to the original value. Integers are the most efficient tokens, but others can work fine too.

    • Token type determines the BTree module needed.

      • If the tokens are 32-bit ints, choose BTrees.family32.II, BTrees.family32.IF or BTrees.family32.IO.

      • If the tokens are 64 bit ints, choose BTrees.family64.II, BTrees.family64.IF or BTrees.family64.IO.

      • If they are anything else, choose BTrees.family32.OI, BTrees.family64.OI, or BTrees.family32.OO (or BTrees.family64.OO–they are the same).

      Within these rules, the choice is somewhat arbitrary unless you plan to merge these results with that of another source that is using a particular BTree module. BTree set operations only work within the same module, so you must match module to module.

    • The family argument in instantiating the catalog lets you change the default btree family for relations and value indexes from BTrees.family32.IF to BTrees.family64.IF.

    • You must define your own functions for tokenizing and resolving tokens. These functions are registered with the catalog for the relations and for each of their value indexes.

    • You add value indexes to relation catalogs to be able to search. Values can be identified to the catalog with callables or interface elements.

      • Using interface attributes will cause an attempt to adapt the relation if it does not already provide the interface.

      • We can use the multiple argument when defining a value index to indicate that the indexed value is a collection. This defaults to False.

      • We can use the name argument when defining a value index to specify the name to be used in queries, rather than relying on the name of the interface attribute or callable.

    • You can set up search indexes to speed up specific searches, usually transitive.

    • Listeners can be registered in the catalog. They are alerted when a relation is added, modified, or removed; and when the catalog is cleared and copied.

  • Catalog Management:

    • Relations are indexed with index(relation), and removed from the catalog with unindex(relation). index_doc(relation_token, relation) and unindex_doc(relation_token) also work.

    • The clear method clears the relations in the catalog.

    • The copy method makes a copy of the current catalog by copying internal data structures, rather than reindexing the relations, which can be a significant optimization opportunity. This copies value indexes and search indexes; and gives listeners an opportunity to specify what, if anything, should be included in the new copy.

  • Searching a catalog:

    • Queries to the relation catalog are formed with dicts.

    • Query keys are the names of the indexes you want to search, or, for the special case of precise relations, the zc.relation.RELATION constant.

    • Query values are the tokens of the results you want to match; or None, indicating relations that have None as a value (or an empty collection, if it is a multiple). Search values can use zc.relation.catalog.any(args) or zc.relation.catalog.Any(args) to specify multiple (non-None) results to match for a given key.

    • The index has a variety of methods to help you work with tokens. tokenizeQuery is typically the most used, though others are available.

    • To find relations that match a query, use findRelations or findRelationTokens. Calling findRelationTokens without any arguments returns the BTree set of all relation tokens in the catalog.

    • To find values that match a query, use findValues or findValueTokens. Calling findValueTokens with only the name of a value index returns the BTree set of all tokens in the catalog for that value index.

    • You search transitively by using a query factory. The zc.relation.queryfactory.TransposingTransitive is a good common case factory that lets you walk up and down a hierarchy. A query factory can be passed in as an argument to search methods as a queryFactory, or installed as a default behavior using addDefaultQueryFactory.

    • To find how a query is related, use findRelationChains or findRelationTokenChains.

    • To find out if a query is related, use canFind.

    • Circular transitive relations are handled to prevent infinite loops. They are identified in findRelationChains and findRelationTokenChains with a zc.relation.interfaces.ICircularRelationPath marker interface.

    • search methods share the following arguments:

      • maxDepth, limiting the transitive depth for searches;

      • filter, allowing code to filter transitive paths;

      • targetQuery, allowing a query to filter transitive paths on the basis of the endpoint;

      • targetFilter, allowing code to filter transitive paths on the basis of the endpoint; and

      • queryFactory, mentioned above.

      In addition, the ignoreSearchIndex argument to findRelations, findRelationTokens, findValues, findValueTokens, and canFind causes the search to ignore search indexes, even if there is an appropriate one.

Next Steps

If you want to read more, next steps depend on how you like to learn. Here are some of the other documents in the zc.relation package.

optimization.txt:

Best practices for optimizing your use of the relation catalog.

searchindex.txt:

Queries factories and search indexes: from basics to nitty gritty details.

tokens.txt:

This document explores the details of tokens. All God’s chillun love tokens, at least if God’s chillun are writing non-toy apps using zc.relation. It includes discussion of the token helpers that the catalog provides, how to use zope.app.intid-like registries with zc.relation, how to use tokens to “join” query results reasonably efficiently, and how to index joins. It also is unnecessarily mind-blowing because of the examples used.

interfaces.py:

The contract, for nuts and bolts.

Finally, the truly die-hard might also be interested in the timeit directory, which holds scripts used to test assumptions and learn.

Changes

1.0 (2008-04-23)

This is the initial release of the zc.relation package. However, it represents a refactoring of another package, zc.relationship. This package contains only a modified version of the relation(ship) index, now called a catalog. The refactored version of zc.relationship index relies on (subclasses) this catalog. zc.relationship also maintains a backwards-compatible subclass.

This package only relies on the ZODB, zope.interface, and zope.testing software, and can be used inside or outside of a standard ZODB database. The software does have to be there, though (the package relies heavily on the ZODB BTrees package).

If you would like to switch a legacy zc.relationship index to a zc.relation catalog, try this trick in your generations script. Assuming the old index is old, the following line should create a new zc.relation catalog with your legacy data:

>>> new = old.copy(zc.relation.Catalog)

Why is the same basic data structure called a catalog now? Because we exposed the ability to mutate the data structure, and what you are really adding and removing are indexes. It didn’t make sense to put an index in an index, but it does make sense to put an index in a catalog. Thus, a name change was born.

The catalog in this package has several incompatibilities from the earlier zc.relationship index, and many new features. The zc.relationship package maintains a backwards-compatible subclass. The following discussion compares the zc.relation catalog with the zc.relationship 1.x index.

Incompatibilities with zc.relationship 1.x index

The two big changes are that method names now refer to Relation rather than Relationship; and the catalog is instantiated slightly differently from the index. A few other changes are worth your attention. The following list attempts to highlight all incompatibilities.

Big incompatibilities:
  • findRelationshipTokenSet and findValueTokenSet are renamed, with some slightly different semantics, as getRelationTokens and getValueTokens. The exact same result as findRelationTokenSet(query) can be obtained with findRelationTokens(query, 1) (where 1 is maxDepth). The same result as findValueTokenSet(reltoken, name) can be obtained with findValueTokens(name, {zc.relation.RELATION: reltoken}, 1).

  • findRelations replaces findRelatonships. The new method will use the defaultTransitiveQueriesFactory if it is set and maxDepth is not 1. It shares the call signature of findRelationChains.

  • isLinked is now canFind.

  • The catalog instantiation arguments have changed from the old index.

    • load and dump (formerly loadRel and dumpRel, respectively) are now required arguments for instantiation.

    • The only other optional arguments are btree (was relFamily) and family. You now specify what elements to index with addValueIndex

    • Note also that addValueIndex defaults to no load and dump function, unlike the old instantiation options.

  • query factories are different. See IQueryFactory in the interfaces.

    • they first get (query, catalog, cache) and then return a getQueries callable that gets relchains and yields queries; OR None if they don’t match.

    • They must also handle an empty relchain. Typically this should return the original query, but may also be used to mutate the original query.

    • They are no longer thought of as transitive query factories, but as general query mutators.

Medium:
  • The catalog no longer inherits from zope.app.container.contained.Contained.

  • The index requires ZODB 3.8 or higher.

Small:
  • deactivateSets is no longer an instantiation option (it was broken because of a ZODB bug anyway, as had been described in the documentation).

Changes and new features

  • The catalog now offers the ability to index certain searches. The indexes must be explicitly instantiated and registered you want to optimize. This can be used when searching for values, when searching for relations, or when determining if two objects are linked. It cannot be used for relation chains. Requesting an index has the usual trade-offs of greater storage space and slower write speed for faster search speed. Registering a search index is done after instantiation time; you can iteratate over the current settings used, and remove them. (The code path expects to support legacy zc.relationship index instances for all of these APIs.)

  • You can now specify new values after the catalog has been created, iterate over the settings used, and remove values.

  • The catalog has a copy method, to quickly make new copies without actually having to reindex the relations.

  • query arguments can now specify multiple values for a given name by using zc.relation.catalog.any(1, 2, 3, 4) or zc.relation.catalog.Any((1, 2, 3, 4)).

  • The catalog supports specifying indexed values by passing callables rather than interface elements (which are also still supported).

  • findRelations and new method findRelationTokens can find relations transitively and intransitively. findRelationTokens when used intransitively repeats the legacy zc.relationship index behavior of findRelationTokenSet. (findRelationTokenSet remains in the API, not deprecated, a companion to findValueTokenSet.)

  • in findValues and findValueTokens, query argument is now optional. If the query evaluates to False in a boolean context, all values, or value tokens, are returned. Value tokens are explicitly returned using the underlying BTree storage. This can then be used directly for other BTree operations.

  • Completely new docs. Unfortunately, still really not good enough.

  • The package has drastically reduced direct dependecies from zc.relationship: it is now more clearly a ZODB tool, with no other Zope dependencies than zope.testing and zope.interface.

  • Listeners allow objects to listen to messages from the catalog (which can be used directly or, for instance, to fire off events).

  • You can search for relations, using a key of zc.relation.RELATION…which is really an alias for None. Sorry. But hey, use the constant! I think it is more readable.

  • tokenizeQuery (and resolveQuery) now accept keyword arguments as an alternative to a normal dict query. This can make constructing the query a bit more attractive (i.e., query = catalog.tokenizeQuery; res = catalog.findValues('object', query(subject=joe, predicate=OWNS))).

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