NAME
Tree::M - implement M-trees for efficient "metric/multimedia-searches"
SYNOPSIS
use Tree::M;
$M = new Tree::M
DESCRIPTION
(not yet)
Ever had the problem of managing multi-dimensional (spatial) data but your database only had one-dimensional indices (b-tree etc.)? Queries like
select data from table where latitude > 40 and latitude < 50
and longitude> 50 and longitude< 60;
are quite inefficient, unless longitude and latitude are part of the same spatial index (e.g. an R-tree).
An M-tree is an index tree that does not directly look at the stored keys but rather requires a distance (a metric, e.g. a vector norm) function to be defined that sorts keys according to their distance. In the example above the distance function could be the maximum norm (max(x1-x2, y1-y2)
). The lookup above would then be something like this:
my $res = $M->range([45,55], 5);
This module implements an M-tree. Although the data structure and the distance function is arbitrary, the current version only implements n-dimensional discrete vectors and hardwires the distance function to the suared euclidean metric (i.e. (x1-x2)**2 + (y1-y2)**2 + (z1-z2)**2 + ...
). Evolution towards more freedom is expected ;)
THE Tree::M CLASS
- $M = new Tree::M arg => value, ...
-
Creates a new M-Tree. Before it can be used you have to call one of the
create
oropen
methods below.ndims => integer the number of dimensions each vector has range => [min, max, steps] min the lowest allowable scalar value in each dimension max the maximum allowable number steps the number of discrete steps (used when stored externally) pagesize => integer the size of one page on underlying storage. usually 4096, but large objects (ndims > 20 or so) might want to increase this
Example: create an M-Tree that stores 8-bit rgb-values:
$M = new Tree::M ndims => 3, range => [0, 255, 256];
Example: create an M-Tree that stores coordinates from -1..1 with 100 different steps:
$M = new Tree::M ndims => 2, range => [-1, 1, 100];
- $M->open(path)
- $M->create($path)
-
Open or create the external storage file
$path
and associate it with the tree.[this braindamaged API will go away ;)]
- $M->insert(\@v, $data)
-
Insert a vector (given by an array reference) into the index and associate it with the value
$data
(a 32-bit integer). - $M->sync
-
Synchronize the data file with memory. Useful after calling
insert
to ensure the data actually reaches stable storage. - $res = $M->range(\@v, $radius)
-
Search all entries not farther away from
@v
then$radius
and return an arrayref containing the searchresults.Each result is again anarrayref composed like this:
[\@v, $data]
e.g. the same as given to the
insert
method. - $res = $M->top(\@v, $n)
-
Return the
$n
"nearest neighbours". The results arrayref (seerange
) contains the$n
index values nearest to@v
, sorted for distance. - $distance = $M->distance(\@v1, \@v2)
-
Calculcate the distance between two vectors, just as they databse engine would do it.
- $depth = $M->maxlevel
-
Return the maximum height of the tree (usually a small integer specifying the length of the path from the root to the farthest leaf)
BUGS
Inserting too many duplicate keys into the tree cause the C++ library to die, so don't do that.
AUTHOR
Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>.
SEE ALSO
perl(1), DBIx::SpatialKeys.