2013
DOI: 10.1515/pik-2013-0006
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A P2P Semantic Query Framework for the Internet of Things

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Cited by 15 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…We have implemented the discovery service using an existing distributed RDF database called DecentSparql [39], which is available as an open source project. It is a Semantic Web database management system with a P2P system to provide full SPARQL 1.1 support, scalability, decentralization, fault-tolerance and infrastructure-free operation.…”
Section: Discovery Of Dms Instancesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have implemented the discovery service using an existing distributed RDF database called DecentSparql [39], which is available as an open source project. It is a Semantic Web database management system with a P2P system to provide full SPARQL 1.1 support, scalability, decentralization, fault-tolerance and infrastructure-free operation.…”
Section: Discovery Of Dms Instancesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Meitz et al [7] showed a huge difference among the peer's data load, when triples are indexed 3 times using a fixed hash depth of 1, i.e., hash(subject), hash(predicate), hash(object). To improve the data distribution they proposed the idea to index triples using a random hash depth, for example, for a hash depth of h=4, there would be 4 potential location keys for each triple components.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To make this work on an Internet scale, a distributed RDF database should be used but is not required by our approach. A number of scalable peer-to-peer-based RDF databases have been proposed (e.g., RDFPeers [10], Atlas [11], 3RDF [12], GridVine [13], or DecentSparql [14]) that distribute RDF triples amongst a-potentially huge-number of peers. Such databases can be used without changing our system as long as SPARQL is fully supported (which is to the best of our knowledge currently only the case for DecentSparql [14]).…”
Section: Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A number of scalable peer-to-peer-based RDF databases have been proposed (e.g., RDFPeers [10], Atlas [11], 3RDF [12], GridVine [13], or DecentSparql [14]) that distribute RDF triples amongst a-potentially huge-number of peers. Such databases can be used without changing our system as long as SPARQL is fully supported (which is to the best of our knowledge currently only the case for DecentSparql [14]). In such a scenario, even parts of the IoT (e.g., embedded computers, routers and other hardware resources), which are most of the time rarely used or even idle, could be part of such a peer-to-peer network and thus the IoT would even provide self-growing storage and query capabilities.…”
Section: Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%