Mulgara (software)
Stable release |
2.1.13
/ January 10, 2012 |
---|---|
Written in | Java |
Operating system | Cross-platform |
Platform | Java Virtual Machine |
Type | Semantic Web |
License | Open Software License |
Website | http://mulgara.org/ |
Mulgara is a triplestore and fork of the original Kowari project. It is Open Source, scalable, and transaction-safe.[1] Mulgara instances can be queried via the iTQL query language and the SPARQL query language.[2]
History
Kowari was first made available for download in beta form on the 26th of October 2003.[3] In April 2004,[4] Tucana Technologies Inc demonstrated the Tucana Knowledge Server (TKS), a proprietary RDF database relying on Kowari as the basis. A steady number of releases occurred throughout 2004, including version 1.0.5 and 1.1 pre-release. The development of TKS stalled due to difficulties with funding at the end of 2004,[5] while the development of Kowari continued on.[6]
In September 2005, Tucana was bought by Northrop Grumman.[7] In January 2006, Northrop Grumman threatened a Kowari developer with legal action if he released any new version of Kowari.[8] As a consequence, Kowari was forked in July 2006. It was renamed to Mulgara as Northrop Grumman owned the Kowari trademark. All development on Kowari has stopped[9] and the community moved to Mulgara. The legal cloud surrounding Kowari was eventually resolved,[10] one of the outcomes was the adoption of the Open Software License 3.0. Since 2008 all new code is being licensed with the Apache 2.0 License.[2]
Since 2006 Mulgara 1.0.0 has been released, significant changes to the transaction architecture was made to support JTA, SPARQL support, a Jena API, and integration with Sesame has been added. As of January 10, 2012 the latest version is 2.1.13.[11]
Internals
Mulgara is not based on a relational database due to the large numbers of table joins encountered by relational systems when dealing with metadata. Instead, Mulgara is a completely new database optimized for metadata management. Mulgara models hold metadata in the form of short subject-predicate-object statements, much like the W3C's Resource Description Framework (RDF) standard. Metadata may be imported into or exported from Mulgara in RDF or Notation 3 form.[1]
See also
References
- 1 2 Mulgara | Semantic Store - Frequently Asked Questions
- 1 2 Welcome to the new Mulgara project!
- ↑ Kowari Developer Beta Release
- ↑ Massive Scalability for RDF Storage and Analysis, David Wood, Tom Adams, Andrew Newman
- ↑ Changes at Tucana Technologies
- ↑ Kowari Developers Archive
- ↑ Northrop Grumman Acquires Proprietary Software from Tucana Technologies
- ↑ Kowari-developers In hope of resolution.
- ↑ SourceForge.net: Kowari
- ↑ Kowari Legal Status
- ↑ Mulgara News