4.6.1 Enriching the journals
The above predicates suffice for most applications. The predicates in
this section provide access to the journal files and the base state
files and are intented to provide additional services, such as reasoning
about the journals, loaded files, etc.3A
library library(rdf_history)
is under development
exploiting these features supporting wiki style editing of RDF.
Using rdf_transaction(Goal, log(Message))
, we can add
additional records to enrich the journal of affected databases with Term
and some additional bookkeeping information. Such a transaction adds a
term
begin(Id, Nest, Time, Message)
before the change operations
on each affected database and end(Id, Nest, Affected)
after
the change operations. Here is an example call and content of the
journal file mydb.jrn
. A full explanation of the terms that
appear in the journal is in the description of rdf_journal_file/2.
?- rdf_transaction(rdf_assert(s,p,o,mydb), log(by(jan))).
start([time(1183540570)]). begin(1, 0, 1183540570.36, by(jan)). assert(s, p, o). end(1, 0, []). end([time(1183540578)]).
Using rdf_transaction(Goal, log(Message, DB))
, where DB
is an atom denoting a (possibly empty) named graph, the system
guarantees that a non-empty transaction will leave a possibly empty
transaction record in DB. This feature assumes named graphs are named
after the user making the changes. If a user action does not affect the
user's graph, such as deleting a triple from another graph, we still
find record of all actions performed by some user in the journal of that
user.
- rdf_journal_file(?DB, ?JournalFile)
- True if
File is the absolute file name of an existing named graph
DB. A journal file contains a sequence of Prolog terms of the
following format.4Future versions
of this library may use an XML based language neutral format.
- start(Attributes)
- Journal has been opened. Currently Attributes contains a term
time(Stamp)
. - end(Attributes)
- Journal was closed. Currently Attributes contains a term
time(Stamp)
. - assert(Subject, Predicate, Object)
- A triple {Subject, Predicate, Object} was added to the database.
- assert(Subject, Predicate, Object, Line)
- A triple {Subject, Predicate, Object} was added to the database with given Line context.
- retract(Subject, Predicate, Object)
- A triple {Subject, Predicate, Object} was deleted from the database. Note that an rdf_retractall/3 call can retract multiple triples. Each of them have a record in the journal. This allows for‘undo’.
- retract(Subject, Predicate, Object, Line)
- Same as above, for a triple with associated line info.
- update(Subject, Predicate, Object, Action)
- See rdf_update/4.
- begin(Id, Nest, Time, Message)
- Added before the changes in each database affected by a transaction with
transaction identifier
log(Message)
. Id is an integer counting the logged transactions to this database. Numbers are increasing and designed for binary search within the journal file. Nest is the nesting level, where‘0’is a toplevel transaction. Time is a time-stamp, currently using float notation with two fractional digits. Message is the term provided by the user as argument of thelog(Message)
transaction. - end(Id, Nest, Others)
- Added after the changes in each database affected by a transaction with
transaction identifier
log(Message)
. Id and Nest match the begin-term. Others gives a list of other databases affected by this transaction and the Id of these records. The terms in this list have the format DB:Id.
- rdf_db_to_file(?DB, ?FileBase)
- Convert between DB (see rdf_source/1)
and file base-file used for storing information on this database. The
full file is located in the directory described by rdf_current_db/1
and has the extension
.trp
for the base state and.jrn
for the journal.