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Creators/Authors contains: "Shaikhha, Amir"

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  1. Datalog is a declarative programming language that has gained popularity in various domains due to its simplicity, expressiveness, and efficiency. But pure Datalog is limited to monotone queries, and cannot be used in most practical applications. For that reason, newer systems are relaxing the language by allowing non-monotone queries to be freely combined with recursion. But by departing from the elegant fixpoint semantics of pure datalog, these systems often result in inefficient query execution, for example they perform redundant computations, or use redundant storage. In this paper, we propose Temporel, a system that allows recursion to be freely combined with non-monotone operators. Temporel optimizes the program by compiling it into a novel intermediate representation that we call TempoDL. Our experimental results show that our system outperforms a state-of-the-art Datalog engine as well as a vectorized and a compiled in-memory database system for a wide range of applications from machine learning to graph processing. 
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  2. Tensor programs often need to process large tensors (vectors, matrices, or higher order tensors) that require a specialized storage format for their memory layout. Several such layouts have been proposed in the literature, such as the Coordinate Format, the Compressed Sparse Row format, and many others, that were especially designed to optimally store tensors with specific sparsity properties. However, existing tensor processing systems require specialized extensions in order to take advantage of every new storage format. In this paper we describe a system that allows users to define flexible storage formats in a declarative tensor query language, similar to the language used by the tensor program. The programmer only needs to write storage mappings, which describe, in a declarative way, how the tensors are laid out in main memory. Then, we describe a cost-based optimizer that optimizes the tensor program for the specific memory layout. We demonstrate empirically significant performance improvements compared to state-of-the-art tensor processing systems. 
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