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4. RDFox Concepts

RDFox uses the concepts shown in the following diagram to structure the information loaded in the system. This section discusses the basic ideas behind these concepts.

RDFoxConcepts

4.1. Servers

Each RDFox instance is associated with a distinct server object, which acts as a top-level container for all information stored in the RDFox instance. A server’s job is to keep track of global configuration options of the RDFox instance, manage data stores that contain various data, and manage roles that identify users capable of interacting with the server. A server instance is created whenever RDFox is started via the command line or via the Java API; in either case, there is a way to specify server options such as the number of threads and the maximum amount of memory that the server should use. The list of all options is given in Section 7.

4.2. Data Stores

A server is divided into data stores. Each data store is identified by a user-defined name that is unique within the server. A data store acts as a container for data that logically belongs together. Many applications will use one data store to store their data; thus, several applications can use one server, while keeping their data separate. Some applications can use more than one data store, but it is key to remember that all queries and rules are evaluated within the context of a single data store. Thus, all information that an application wishes to access in a single query should be loaded into one data store.

RDFox provides many types of data stores, and each type is identified by a unique type name (e.g., par-complex-nn). Data store types differ in their maximum capacity, and some support concurrent operations where others do not. Moreover, each data store can be customized via a number of parameters; for example, a data store can be configured to use the implicit semantics of owl:sameAs or not. All parameters are specified as a list of key-value pairs when the data store is created, and they cannot be changed subsequently. Data store types and parameters are described in detail in Section 8.

A data store contains a dictionary, which keeps track of all resources (i.e., IRIs, blank nodes, and literals) occurring in the data loaded in the data store. The dictionary assigns to each resource a unique integer called a resource ID. This mapping is usually of no concern for clients, unless clients aim to optimize communication with an RDFox server by retrieving resource IDs instead of resources themselves.

RDF data in a data store is further stored in several tuple tables. A data store can also reference a number of data sources, which provide access to data in formats other than RDF, such as relational databases or CSV files. Moreover, a data store can contain OWL axioms and rules, which jointly provide inference rules that are to be used for reasoning within a data store. Finally, a data store can contain statistics modules, which keep summaries of the data loaded in the data store that are useful for query planning.

4.3. Tuple Tables

A data store can contain several tuple tables, which are containers for actual data. The data of a tuple table is a collection of items called facts, and each fact can be understood as a list of RDF resources (i.e., IRIs, blank nodes, or literals). Facts with just three components are commonly called triples. Each tuple table is identified with a name that must be unique within a data store. Moreover, each tuple table has a minimal and maximal arity, which are numbers determining the smallest and the largest numbers of RDF resources in a fact stored in the tuple table. In most cases, the minimal and maximal arity are the same, in which case they are called just arity.

RDFox uses the very general concept of a tuple table to represent many different kinds of data containers.

  • In-memory tuple tables are used to store triples of the default and the named graphs, and they are described in more detail in Section 9.4.

  • Data source tuple tables provide a ‘virtual view’ over data in non-RDF data sources, such as CSV files, relational databases, or an Apache Solr index. Importing external data is explained in detail in Section 10.

  • Built-in tuple tables contain some well-known facts that can be useful in various applications of RDFox, and they are described in more detail in Section 9.5.

Each fact in a tuple table is associated with one or more fact domains. Intuitively, the domain of a fact reflects how a fact was added to a tuple table — that is, whether a fact was explicitly introduced by the user or derived through reasoning, and so on. Fact domains are described in more detail in Section 9.2.

4.4. Data Sources

To support accessing data in formats other than RDFox, one or more data sources can be registered with a data store. Registering a data source requires specifying a number of parameters that govern how the data is accessed. Each data source is identified by a name that is unique for the data store. The access to the actual data is provided by data source tuple tables, which are created by referencing previously registered data sources. The process of accessing external data sources is described in more detail in Section 10.

4.5. OWL Axioms

To support reasoning with OWL ontologies, one can import OWL axioms into a data store. For example, an OWL axiom can be used to state that the :Professor class is a subclass of the :Person class; if such an axiom is imported into a data store, RDFox will automatically infer that each instance of :Professor is also an instance of :Person. RDFox provides ways to add and remove OWL axioms, and axioms can be encoded either using the RDF Syntax or the Functional-Style Syntax (FSS). Moreover, the loaded OWL axioms can be retrieved from the data store using one of RDFox APIs.

Each OWL axiom in a data store is associated with one or both of the following axiom domains.

  • The user axiom domain contains axioms that a user added explicitly, either by using the RDFox API or by importing a Functional-Style syntax document.

  • The triples axiom domain contains axioms that are obtained by analysing the triples in the default graph of a data store using the translation specified in the OWL 2 standard (https://www.w3.org/TR/owl2-mapping-to-rdf/).

An axiom can belong to both axiom domains; for example, one can import the SubClassOf(:Professor :Person) Functional-Style Syntax axiom explicitly into the user axiom domain, and one also import the same axiom into the triples axiom domain by importing a triple :Professor rdfs:subClassOf :Person . into the default graph.

4.6. Rules

To support general reasoning, one can import Datalog rules into a data store. Rules can intuitively be understood as “if-then” statements expressing general truths about a domain of interest. For example, :Person[?X] :- :Professor[?X] . is a rule stating that every professor is a person. If such a rule is added to a data store, then if the data store also contains triples :Peter rdf:type :Professor . and :Paul rdf:type :Professor ., RDFox will automatically derive triples :Peter rdf:type :Person . and :Paul rdf:type :Person .. RDFox also supports incremental reasoning: if triple :Paul rdf:type :Professor . is removed from the data store, RDFox will automatically remove :Paul rdf:type :Person .. RDFox provides ways to add and remove rules, as well as to retrieve the rules in a data store. The rule language of RDFox, the provided reasoning support, and examples of use of reasoning in practical applications are discussed in detail in Section 6.

Each rule in a data store is associated with one or more of the following three rule domains.

  • The user rule domain contains the rules that a user added explicitly, either by using the RDFox API or by importing a Datalog document.

  • The axioms rule domain contains rules obtained by translating all OWL axioms in the data store (in both axiom domains), thus allowing RDFox to perform OWL reasoning. Only axioms that conform to the OWL 2 RL profile are translated. Rules in this rule domain cannot be manipulated directly by the user; rather, a user can add/remove triples and/or axioms in the user axiom domain, and RDFox will automatically adjust the rules in the axioms rule domain.

  • The internal rule domain contains rules that RDFox uses internally. The exact internal rules used depend on the data store configuration, and they are discussed in more detail in Section 6.6.4.

A rule can belong to multiple rule domains. For example, a rule could be added by the user to the user rule domain, and it could also be obtained from OWL axioms and thus be added to the axioms rule domain.

4.7. Roles

A server can contain several roles, each representing an actor (or a type of actor) allowed to access a server. Performing actions on a server or its parts requires first authenticating as one of that server’s roles. The access control model of RDFox is described in detail in Section 11.