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Vertex Query

okram edited this page May 22, 2012 · 11 revisions

A vertex is incident to both incoming and outgoing edges. There are many things that distinguish an edge.

  • Edges have labels
  • Edges have properties
  • Edges have directions.

With the method Vertex.query() it is possible to query the graph from the perspective of a vertex. In this way, only those edges that meet the query criteria are selected from the underlying graph representation.

Query and the Supernode Problem

The benefit of Vertex.query() is that it helps to reduce I/O and in-memory filtering, by allowing the developer to state exactly the edges/vertices needed by the application. More specifically, it helps to alleviate the supernode problem. Many real-world graphs have numerous vertices with very few edges and very few vertices with numerous edges. When traversing a graph without query selection, if a vertex is reached that has numerous edges, then all those edges are loaded into memory and processed. By using Vertex.query(), it is possible to provide fine-grained, selective control over which edges are ultimately retrieved. In this way, by being selective, a supernode is seen as less densely connected than when being unbiased about edge selection.

This notion generalizes to only grabbing those edges from the underlying graph representation that are actually going to be needed higher-up in the stack.

Query Use Cases

Here are examples of when Vertex.query() and the resultant Query object are useful in graph processing.

  • Edge label selection: If a person vertex has liked many things, but the traverser is only interested in events the person has attended, then there is no need to touch the liked edges. The Query.labels() method serves this purpose.
  • Edge property selection: If a person has liked many things, but the traverser is only interested in those liked edges that have a property of “greater than 4 stars” (the things the person really likes), then Query.has() can be used to only select the liked edges that are reflective of the person really liking something.
  • Edge property interval selection: If a person has liked many things, but the traverser is only interested in those things that the person has liked in the last 2 weeks, then by using the Query.interval() method, only those recently created liked edges are retrieved.
  • Edge direction selection: If a person follows many people and is followed by many people, but the traverser is only interested in who the person follows, then Query.direction() can be used to select only outgoing follows edges.

Note that for label and direction filtering, the methods Vertex.getEdges() and Vertex.getVertices() can be used as these are typical behaviors. Finally, while not mentioned in this section, there are other methods in Query that provide more ways of intelligently selecting data from the underlying graph representation.

Query and Graph Implementations

For network/server-based graph systems (e.g. those graph databases backed by Rexster), the Query feature is readily useable in that instead of pulling all the edge data over the wire to only be filtered by the client, the filtering can take place at the remote/server location.

However, more specifically at the graph’s location, Query is useful in that if the underlying graph supports “vertex-centric indices,” then every vertex will index its edges according to label, direction, properties, etc. In this way, instead of doing a linear scan/filter of all the edges emanating from a vertex, a lookup to only those edges that meet the Query criteria can be enacted and thus, a linear scan can be avoided. For graphs at scale (billions of edges) where a vertex can have a million edges (i.e. a supernode), this can yield significant performance benefits during traversal.