By K. Maruyama, S. E. Smith
Communications of the ACM,
November 1976,
Vol. 19 No. 11, Pages 634-642
10.1145/360363.360370
Comments
In most database organizations, the cost of accessing the database will increase due to structural changes caused by updates and insertions. By reorganizing the database, the access costs can be reduced. A basic problem is to establish the proper tradeoff between performance, storage costs, and reorganization costs. This paper considers the optimum points at which to reorganize a database. A disk file organization which allows for distributed free space is described. A cost function describing the excess costs due to physical disorganization is defined, and this function is minimized to obtain the optimum reorganization points. Numerical examples based on the characteristics of existing disk storage devices are given.
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