scholarly journals A 6-DIMENSIONAL HILBERT APPROACH TO INDEX FULL WAVEFORM LiDAR DATA IN A DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING ENVIRONMENT

Author(s):  
A. V. Vo ◽  
N. Chauhan ◽  
D. F. Laefer ◽  
M. Bertolotto

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Laser scanning data are increasingly available across the globe. To maximize the data's usability requires proper storage and indexing. While significant research has been invested in developing storage and indexing solutions for laser scanning point clouds (i.e. using the discrete form of the data), little attention has been paid to developing equivalent solutions for full waveform (FWF) laser scanning data, especially in a distributed computing environment. Given the growing availability of FWF sensors and datasets, FWF data management solutions are increasingly needed. This paper presents an attempt towards establishing a scalable solution for handling large FWF datasets by introducing the distributed computing solution for FWF data. The work involves a FWF database built atop HBase &amp;ndash; the distributed database system running on Hadoop commodity clusters. By combining a 6-dimensional (6D) Hilbert spatial code and a temporal index into a compound indexing key, the database system is capable of supporting multiple spatial, temporal, and spatio-temporal queries. Such queries are important for FWF data exploration and dissemination. The proposed spatial decomposition at a fine resolution of 0.05<span class="thinspace"></span>m allows the storage of each LiDAR FWF measurement (i.e. pulse, waves, and points) on a single row of the database, thereby providing the full capabilities to add, modify, and remove each measurement record anatomically. While the feasibility and capabilities of the 6D Hilbert solution are evident, the Hilbert decomposition is not due to the complications from the combination of the data’s high dimensionality, fine resolution, and large spatial extent. These factors lead to a complex set of both attractive attributes and limitation in the proposed solution, which are described in this paper based on experimental tests using a 1.1 billion pulse LiDAR scan of a portion of Dublin, Ireland.</p>

CONVERTER ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 100-106
Author(s):  
Haitao Li

Based on the in-depth study of the existing database synchronization model, in order to improve the cross platform ability of the system and facilitate the construction of small and medium-sized enterprise information platform, this paper proposes a heterogeneous distributed computing scheme based on Web service. The scheme uses JMS to realize the message transmission between systems, and uses web service technology to realize cross platform data reading and writing. In the aspect of distributed transaction processing, the two-phase commit protocol is improved to reduce the probability of system deadlock and effectively ensure the consistency of distributed database data. In order to improve the performance of distributed database system, cache technology is introduced, and the way of integrating cache and database transaction processing is proposed, which effectively ensures the validity of cache data. The architecture is oriented to program developers, who can develop efficient and convenient distributed database system on the basis of this architecture. Finally, this architecture is applied to the background management system of mobile express service. The running results show that the architecture can well meet the business requirements of distributed heterogeneous database system synchronization.


1990 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 363-373
Author(s):  
Zhiquan Jin ◽  
Chengfei Liu ◽  
Zhongxiu Sun ◽  
Xiaofang Zhou ◽  
Peipei Chen ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 245 ◽  
pp. 07026
Author(s):  
Dave Dykstra

The WLCG Web Proxy Auto Discovery (WPAD) service provides a convenient mechanism for jobs running anywhere on the WLCG to dynamically discover web proxy cache servers that are nearby. The web proxy caches are general purpose for a number of different http applications, but different applications have different usage characteristics and not all proxy caches are engineered to work with the heaviest loads. For this reason, the initial sources of information for WLCG WPAD were the static configurations that ATLAS and CMS maintain for the Conditions data that they read through the Frontier Distributed Database system, which is the most demanding popular WLCG application for web proxy caches. That works well for use at traditional statically defined WLCG sites, but now that usage of commercial clouds is increasing, there is also a need for web proxy caches to dynamically register themselves as they are created. A package called Shoal had already been created to manage dynamically created web proxy caches. This paper describes the integration of the Shoal package into the WLCG WPAD system, such that both statically and dynamically created web proxy caches can be located from a single source. It also describes other improvements to the WLCG WPAD system since the last CHEP publication.


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