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Creators/Authors contains: "Karatsenidis, Konstantinos"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 1, 2026
  2. A key design decision for data systems is whether they follow the row-store or the column-store paradigm. The former supports transactional workloads, while the latter is better for analytical queries. This decision has a significant impact on the entire data system architecture. The multiple-decadelong journey of these two designs has led to a new family of hybrid transactional/analytical processing (HTAP) architectures. Several efforts have been proposed to reap the benefits of both worlds by proposing systems that maintain multiple copies of data (in different physical layouts) and convert them into the desired layout as required. Due to data duplication, the additional necessary bookkeeping, and the cost of converting data between different layouts, these systems compromise between efficient analytics and data freshness. We depart from existing designs by proposing a radically new approach. We ask the question: “What if we could access any layout and ship only the relevant data through the memory hierarchy by transparently converting rows to (arbitrary groups of) columns?” To achieve this functionality, we capitalize on the reinvigorated trend of hardware specialization (that has been accelerated due to the tapering of Moore's law) to propose Relational Fabric, a near-data vertical partitioner that allows memory or storage components to perform on-the-fly transparent data transformation. By exposing an intuitive API, Relational Fabric pushes vertical partitioning to the hardware, which profoundly impacts the process of designing and building data systems. (A) There is no need for data duplication and layout conversion, making HTAP systems viable using a single layout. (B) It simplifies the memory and storage manager that needs to maintain and update a single data layout. (C) It reduces unnecessary data movement through the memory hierarchy, allowing for better hardware utilization and, ultimately, better performance. In this paper, we present Relational Fabric for both memory and storage. We present our initial results on Relational Fabric for in-memory systems and discuss the challenges of building this hardware and the opportunities it brings for simplicity and innovation in the data system software stack, including physical design, query optimization, query evaluation, and concurrency control. 
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  3. Transactional and analytical database management systems (DBMS) typically employ different data layouts: row-stores for the first and column-stores for the latter. In order to bridge the requirements of the two without maintaining two systems and two (or more) copies of the data, our proposed system Relational Memory employs specialized hardware that transforms the base row table into arbitrary column groups at query execution time. This approach maximizes the cache locality and is easy to use via a simple abstraction that allows transparent on-the-fly data transformation. Here, we demonstrate how to deploy and use Relational Memory via four representative scenarios. The demonstration uses the full-stack implementation of Relational Memory on the Xilinx Zynq UltraScale+ MPSoC platform. Conference participants will interact with Relational Memory deployed in the actual platform. 
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