Bigdata
For querying across the entire Knowledgebase dataset, Phenoscape is using the Bigdata RDF triplestore. We selected Bigdata for several reasons:
- Top SPARQL query performance among open-source triplestores
- Support for SPARQL 1.1 query language. This is required for aggregates such as
COUNT
. Property paths also provide basic transitivity reasoning at query time. - Embedded full-text index available within SPARQL queries.
- Concise bounded description mode for SPARQL
DESCRIBE
queries. When blank nodes are included in aDESCRIBE
result, this recursively describes them until the graph terminates in named nodes in all directions. This is useful for grabbing the necessary and sufficient RDF graph needed to reconstruct OWL class expressions.
Machine configurations
- SPARQL endpoint using the Bigdata NanoSparqlServer within Apache Tomcat. This machine runs Ubuntu Linux, with 4 CPUs and 8 GB RAM. Tomcat is allowed 6 GB RAM.
- This database holds
- owlet service which expands SPARQL queries using the ELK reasoner and submits them to the preceding Bigdata endpoint. This machine runs Ubuntu Linux, with 4 CPUs and 16 GB RAM. Tomcat is allowed 12 GB RAM.
- The ELK instance holds about 750,000 logical axioms.
- Direct loading of Bigdata to answer long-running, high-memory queries on the DSCR cluster. We have machines with many CPUs and over 100 GB RAM.
- Example script: https://github.com/phenoscape/presence-absence-matrix
Querying with OWL semantics
While OWL can be stored as RDF, thinking at the OWL axiom level can be quite different from thinking at the RDF triple level. While OWL matches up nicely with RDF and SPARQL when dealing with object property assertions for individuals, querying using complex class descriptions is much more straightforward using DL queries to an OWL reasoner rather than via SPARQL, which is designed for matching triple patterns. Embedding SPARQL patterns matching pieces of the OWL-to-RDF serialization is error prone and will likely provide incomplete results. It is best to consider that triples using predicates from the OWL namespace are a private implementation detail (e.g. owl:onProperty, owl:someValuesFrom, etc.).
Since Phenoscape annotations are composed largely of complex OWL class descriptions, we use two approaches to make use of OWL semantics within SPARQL queries:
- Generated sets of named classes for useful expression patterns. These include annotation property relations which make it easier to query these "class-level relationships" from SPARQL.
- Existential restriction hierarchies, such as (part_of some X), where X is every anatomical structure
- Absence classes
- owlet, which allows embedding of arbitrary DL queries into SPARQL. This provides for an infinite number of possible expressions, but precludes using variables in the class expression.