DocumentCode
3618178
Title
"One size fits all": an idea whose time has come and gone
Author
M. Stonebraker;U. Cetintemel
Author_Institution
Comput. Sci. & Artificial Intelligence Lab., MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
fYear
2005
fDate
6/27/1905 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
2
Lastpage
11
Abstract
The last 25 years of commercial DBMS development can be summed up in a single phrase: "one size fits all". This phrase refers to the fact that the traditional DBMS architecture (originally designed and optimized for business data processing) has been used to support many data-centric applications with widely varying characteristics and requirements. In this paper, we argue that this concept is no longer applicable to the database market, and that the commercial world will fracture into a collection of independent database engines, some of which may be unified by a common front-end parser. We use examples from the stream-processing market and the data-warehouse market to bolster our claims. We also briefly discuss other markets for which the traditional architecture is a poor fit and argue for a critical rethinking of the current factoring of systems services into products.
Keywords
"Databases","Engines","Computer science","Prototypes","Costs","Data warehouses","Delay","Artificial intelligence","Laboratories","Computer architecture"
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Data Engineering, 2005. ICDE 2005. Proceedings. 21st International Conference on
ISSN
1084-4627
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2285-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICDE.2005.1
Filename
1410100
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