Network Working Group                                        G. H. Mealy
Request for Comments: 195                                           HARV
NIC 7140                                                   16 July, 1971
Categories:     D.4, D.7


       Data Computers -- Data Descriptions and Access Language

  According to the minutes of the NWG meeting in May (RFC 164), it
  appears that a unified approach to Network data management is being
  proposed to CCA.  The purpose of this paper is to discuss some of the
  problems involved and to suggest possible avenues of approach toward
  their resolution.  Parenthetically, I believe that a non-unified
  approach leads to even worse problems.

  My main remarks are predicated on a few assumptions and their
  consequences.  Since some or all may turn out to be wrong, it seems
  appropriate to state them explicitly.  The steps in the arguments
  leading from the assumptions to their consequences may appear to be
  (and in fact may be) less than obvious.  They are all of a piece,
  however, and revolve around the necessity for doing business with a
  number of dissimilar HOST systems while attempting to make it
  unnecessary for an individual user or user program to know the
  details of data file organization and representation.  Given this as
  an objective, I believe that the arguments are quite direct.

  Assumptions
  ------------

     1. We face the usual set of naming, cataloging, protection,
        backup, etc. problems.

        (I say this only to dismiss the subject as far as the following
        is concerned.  In my estimation, these problems and feasible
        solutions are reasonably well understood; our real problem in
        this area is in reaching agreement on specifics while leaving
        sufficient ratholes for future expansion).

     2. Files stored will contain arbitrarily complex data objects.

     3. The organization of any file (that is, the way its structure is
        mapped into physical storage by the data computer) will
        normally be unknown by the user.








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RFC 195                      Data Computers                    July 1971


     4. Data items in files may be stored in arbitrary representations
        (e.g., those of the originating user's HOST rather than that of
        the data computer or other "standard" representation).

     5. Access to a file will normally be to some subset of it. (I.e.,
        the unit for transmission will usually be part of a file rather
        than the whole file, and access will not necessarily be
        sequential).

  Consequences
  ------------

     1. A method of data description significantly more powerful than
        now commonly available (as with COBOL or PL/I) is required.
        The descriptions must be stored with the files.  Data item
        representations and storage organizations must be describable.

     2. The data computer must offer a "data reconfiguration service",
        based on use of the data descriptions.

     3. A representation and organization-independent level of
        discourse must be made available for controlling access.

  Data Description
  -----------------

  As it happens, the descriptive facilities in ELl (References 1 and 2)
  are almost adequate as they stand.  ELl is an extensible language --
  the compiler and interpreter for ELl are principal components of a
  system implemented on the PDP-lO at Harvard -- which allows the
  definition of arbitrary data structures in terms of a few primitive
  data types (BOOL, CHAR, INT, REAL, SYMBOL, MODE, FORM, and ROUTINE).
  These data types are of the sort I called "generic" in Reference 3.
  To the EL1 implementation on the PDP-10, say, we would have to add
  methods to describe a specific representation of INT, etc. and
  primitive routines to convert between specific representations.

  In the ECL system (in which EL1 is embedded), there is no rigid
  distinction between compile time and run time.  In particular, if the
  arguments and free variables of a routine are evaluable at compile
  time, then the routine is evaluated and the value replaces the call.
  More generally, arbitrarily large amounts of a routine being compiled
  may collapse into values.  As far as the data computer is concerned,
  this offers the possibility of producing tailor-made data
  reconfiguration programs, taking maximum advantage of the data
  descriptions at compile time rather than using a strictly
  interpretative mode of operation.




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RFC 195                      Data Computers                    July 1971


  Access Language
  ---------------

  Here, I am on less firm ground.  I will suggest, however, that some
  of the ideas of Sattley, et al (Reference 4) deserve consideration.
  I will quote from the Reference:

  "... Our proposal is a language for describing the transferable
  features of files, in which conventional programming languages (e.g.,
  FORTRAN, ALGOL, etc.,) can be embedded, and from which the
  information necessary to optimize the use of secondary storage can be
  easily abstracted.  This language defines our abstract model of
  secondary storage in the same way that FORTRAN defined an abstract
  machine.  This language should have (at least) the following
  features:

     1. File declarations name the file and the elements in the file,
        and specify the range of forms that the elements can take.
        Each file has precisely one named element.  Each file includes
        the (maximum) size (in number of elements) of the file.

     2. Subsets of files can be created by means of grouping
        declarations.  Such subsets can be nested.

     3. Subsets of files can be named by means of naming declarations.
        Such declarations can also name individual elements of the
        file.  Some form of implicit naming, allowing language
        constructs such as GET ANOTHER TRIPLE, is included.

     4. Members of a set (i.e., elements in a subset or file, subsets
        in a containing subset or file) can be ordered by order
        declarations.  Some form of arbitrary but fixed ordering,
        allowing language constructs such as GET NEXT TRIPLE, is
        included.

     5. The portions of a file transacted with at a point of access is
        declared.  The size of this portion can be expressed in
        absolute or relative terms.

     6. At each point of access to secondary storage, an environment is
        described (or referenced) which contains those declarations of
        types (l)-(5) necessary to define the transaction with
        secondary.








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RFC 195                      Data Computers                    July 1971


  A language with the above features makes no mention of hardware
  devices, but it provides the programmer with the means of defining
  the algorithm-dependent features of his files so that those files
  might be transferred efficiently from machine to machine".

  In the Sattley, et al study, the notion was that a compiler would
  take the source program and actually compile the hardware-dependent
  file accessing code.  In our environment, we are concerned with
  control commands to the data computer (e.g., GET NEXT WALDO) and
  supplying the data computer with enough information to define a
  WALDO.  The basic functions would seem to be the same, in either
  case, albeit implemented rather differently.

References

  1.  Wegbreit, B. The Treatment of Data Types in EL1.  Technical
      Report, Division of Engineering and Applied Physics, Harvard
      University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, May 1971.

  2.  Wegbreit, B. The ECL Programming System.  Technical Report,
      Division of Engineering and Applied Physics, Harvard University,
      Cambridge, Massachusetts, April 1971.

  3.  Mealy, G. H. Another Look at Data.  AFIPS Conference Proceedings,
      vol. 31, 1967 Fall Joint Computer Conference

  4.  Sattley, K., Millstein, R. and Warshall, S. On Program
      Transferability.  Report CA-7011-2411, Massachusetts Computer
      Associates, Wakefield, Massachusetts, Movember 1970.


      [ This RFC was put into machine readable form for entry ]
      [ into the online RFC archives by Larry Masinter 10/99 ]


















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