Abstract

The pre-computation of data cubes is critical to improving the response time of on-line analytical processing (OLAP) systems and can be instrumental in accelerating data mining tasks in large data warehouses. In order to meet the need for improved performance created by growing data sizes, parallel solutions for generating the data cube are becoming increasingly important. The paper presents a parallel method for generating data cubes on a shared-nothing multiprocessor. Since no (expensive) shared disk is required, our method can be used on low cost Beowulf style clusters consisting of standard PCs with local disks connected via a data switch. Our approach uses a ROLAP representation of the data cube where views are stored as relational tables. This allows for tight integration with current relational database technology. We have implemented our parallel shared-nothing data cube generation method and evaluated it on a PC cluster, exploring relative speedup, local vs. global schedule trees, data skew, cardinality of dimensions, data dimensionality, and balance tradeoffs. For an input data set of 2000000 rows (72 Megabytes), our parallel data cube generation method achieves close to optimal speedup; generating a full data cube of /spl ap/227 million rows (5.6 Gigabytes) on a 16 processors cluster in under 6 minutes. For an input data set of 10,000,000 rows (360 Megabytes), our parallel method, running on a 16 processor PC cluster, created a data cube consisting of /spl ap/846 million rows (21.7 Gigabytes) in under 47 minutes.

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