121 lines
		
	
	
		
			4.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			121 lines
		
	
	
		
			4.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| 
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| This directory contains an SQLite extension that implements a virtual 
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| table type that allows users to create, query and manipulate r-tree[1] 
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| data structures inside of SQLite databases. Users create, populate 
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| and query r-tree structures using ordinary SQL statements.
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| 
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|     1.  SQL Interface
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| 
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|         1.1  Table Creation
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|         1.2  Data Manipulation
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|         1.3  Data Querying
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|         1.4  Introspection and Analysis
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| 
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|     2.  Compilation and Deployment
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| 
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|     3.  References
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| 
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| 
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| 1. SQL INTERFACE
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| 
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|   1.1 Table Creation.
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| 
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|     All r-tree virtual tables have an odd number of columns between
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|     3 and 11. Unlike regular SQLite tables, r-tree tables are strongly 
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|     typed. 
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| 
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|     The leftmost column is always the pimary key and contains 64-bit 
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|     integer values. Each subsequent column contains a 32-bit real
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|     value. For each pair of real values, the first (leftmost) must be 
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|     less than or equal to the second. R-tree tables may be 
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|     constructed using the following syntax:
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| 
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|       CREATE VIRTUAL TABLE <name> USING rtree(<column-names>)
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| 
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|     For example:
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| 
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|       CREATE VIRTUAL TABLE boxes USING rtree(boxno, xmin, xmax, ymin, ymax);
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|       INSERT INTO boxes VALUES(1, 1.0, 3.0, 2.0, 4.0);
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| 
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|     Constructing a virtual r-tree table <name> creates the following three
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|     real tables in the database to store the data structure:
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| 
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|       <name>_node
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|       <name>_rowid
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|       <name>_parent
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| 
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|     Dropping or modifying the contents of these tables directly will
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|     corrupt the r-tree structure. To delete an r-tree from a database,
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|     use a regular DROP TABLE statement:
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| 
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|       DROP TABLE <name>;
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| 
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|     Dropping the main r-tree table automatically drops the automatically
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|     created tables. 
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| 
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|   1.2 Data Manipulation (INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE).
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| 
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|     The usual INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE syntax is used to manipulate data
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|     stored in an r-tree table. Please note the following:
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| 
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|       * Inserting a NULL value into the primary key column has the
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|         same effect as inserting a NULL into an INTEGER PRIMARY KEY
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|         column of a regular table. The system automatically assigns
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|         an unused integer key value to the new record. Usually, this
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|         is one greater than the largest primary key value currently
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|         present in the table.
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| 
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|       * Attempting to insert a duplicate primary key value fails with
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|         an SQLITE_CONSTRAINT error.
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| 
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|       * Attempting to insert or modify a record such that the value
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|         stored in the (N*2)th column is greater than that stored in
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|         the (N*2+1)th column fails with an SQLITE_CONSTRAINT error.
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| 
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|       * When a record is inserted, values are always converted to 
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|         the required type (64-bit integer or 32-bit real) as if they
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|         were part of an SQL CAST expression. Non-numeric strings are
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|         converted to zero.
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| 
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|   1.3 Queries.
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| 
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|     R-tree tables may be queried using all of the same SQL syntax supported
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|     by regular tables. However, some query patterns are more efficient
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|     than others.
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| 
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|     R-trees support fast lookup by primary key value (O(logN), like 
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|     regular tables).
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| 
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|     Any combination of equality and range (<, <=, >, >=) constraints
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|     on spatial data columns may be used to optimize other queries. This
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|     is the key advantage to using r-tree tables instead of creating 
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|     indices on regular tables.
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| 
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|   1.4 Introspection and Analysis.
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| 
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|     TODO: Describe rtreenode() and rtreedepth() functions.
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| 
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| 
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| 2. COMPILATION AND USAGE
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| 
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|   The easiest way to compile and use the RTREE extension is to build
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|   and use it as a dynamically loadable SQLite extension. To do this
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|   using gcc on *nix:
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| 
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|     gcc -shared rtree.c -o libSqliteRtree.so
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| 
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|   You may need to add "-I" flags so that gcc can find sqlite3ext.h
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|   and sqlite3.h. The resulting shared lib, libSqliteRtree.so, may be
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|   loaded into sqlite in the same way as any other dynamicly loadable
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|   extension.
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| 
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| 
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| 3. REFERENCES
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| 
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|   [1]  Atonin Guttman, "R-trees - A Dynamic Index Structure For Spatial 
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|        Searching", University of California Berkeley, 1984.
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| 
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|   [2]  Norbert Beckmann, Hans-Peter Kriegel, Ralf Schneider, Bernhard Seeger,
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|        "The R*-tree: An Efficient and Robust Access Method for Points and
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|        Rectangles", Universitaet Bremen, 1990.
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