Yes, the dqp shell was killed off - may it rest in peace with QueryBuilder.
The current thinking is that Teiid is moving closer to the data layer with as much
standardization as possible. As you mention below with view creation, almost everything
we do maps directly to SQL standards - including most of how of source/external metadata
is represented
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL/MED (the processing model of SQL/MED is
another discussion). We'd be introducing new, but fairly trivial, syntax for things
like access patterns, update procedures, and external update options. Additional or
extension metadata needed by the source at runtime can be treated as a separate issue.
The connector itself could be required to capture additional metadata in whatever format
it wants (which is currently done by the text connector), or the ddl syntax could be
massaged to accept attributes.
XML document models are a different story, but I'm not sure there is much interest in
moving that feature forward.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Alex Miller" <alexdmiller(a)yahoo.com>
To: "John Verhaeg" <jverhaeg(a)redhat.com>
Cc: teiid-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
Sent: Tuesday, June 9, 2009 1:52:14 PM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central
Subject: Re: [teiid-dev] VDB metadata consumed by Teiid
> Did you guys kill off the command-line vdb tool? Seems like
that was one
possible direction for importing physical metadata and potentially to add views
within a lightweight tool.
We could still go this direction, except for a) it's not really that
lightweight, b) it does nothing to allow for integration with metadata from
other products, and c) I don't believe it even supported views, just access to
multiple physical sources.
a) true (although it was lighter weight than the designer),
b) true although it would be theoretically possible to create an infrastructure to import
metadata through some sort of combined connector/metadata importer infrastructure that we
always talked about
c) correct, although a relational view can almost entirely be defined by the view sql
statement. view definition was in the original design work. other views (like xml) are
far more complicated and not amenable to a command-like interface, imho. a dsl benefits
from being able to be command-like for simple stuff and a declarative definition for hairy
stuff so it can scale better (although it's easy to do dsls badly as well).
I'm not really arguing for or against any of these, just brainstorming. The benefits
of a command driven tool are that it frees you from committing to anything other than the
commands (and not vdb formats or definition languages).
> Another possibly crazy idea that I would seriously consider
these days is
using an embedded dsl / builder in a language like Groovy to define vdb
metadata. You could take the groovy script itself as the vdb definition or even
run it to produce a compiled vdb. If you were clever enough, the dsl could be
extensible to allow metadata creation with new metamodels. But this is probably
only a valid solution if you expect a developer or other suitably precise user
to be the target.
I believe the developer audience you mentioned is a serious concern, and as with
your first suggestion, this also provides no type of standard with which to
leverage any sort of interoperability with other products.
Extensible dsls would allow you or others to build plugins that could take DDL or whatever
format is appropriate.
One way to think about this problem is to what you want to nail down and live with and
what you want to allow to change in the future. Depending on your roadmap, you would make
different decisions. Some things you might want to lock down:
- commands in a tool
- vdb format -> currently this is locked down binary archive and is highly structured
and opaque
- a language describing the contents of a vdb - "language" could be SQL or some
other more flexible DSL
- an api
I suspect that to foster a community, whatever choice you make would be served by having a
pluggable way to add new metadata. Seems like that's where you started from in the
original email.
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