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Computer architecture : a quantitative approach / / John L. Hennessy, David A. Patterson
Computer architecture : a quantitative approach / / John L. Hennessy, David A. Patterson
Autore Hennessy John L
Edizione [5th ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2012
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (857 pages)
Disciplina 004.2/2
Altri autori (Persone) PattersonDavid A
Collana Morgan Kaufmann series in computer architecture and design
Soggetto topico Computer architecture
Computer arithmetic
ISBN 9786613298973
9781283298971
128329897X
9780123838735
0123838738
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9911006580903321
Hennessy John L  
Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2012
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Digital modeling of material appearance [[electronic resource] /] / Julie Dorsey, Holly Rushmeier, François Sillion
Digital modeling of material appearance [[electronic resource] /] / Julie Dorsey, Holly Rushmeier, François Sillion
Autore Dorsey J (Julie)
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (329 p.)
Disciplina 006.6
Altri autori (Persone) RushmeierHolly E
SillionFrançois X
Collana The Morgan Kaufmann series in computer graphics
Soggetto topico Computer graphics
Visualization
Image processing - Digital techniques
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-281-10000-5
9786611100001
0-08-055671-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Digital Modeling of Material Appearance; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Acknowledgments; Chapter 1. Introduction; Chapter 2. Background; 2.1 Light; 2.2 Human Perception and Judgments; 2.3 Image Synthesis; 2.4 Summary and Further Reading; Chapter 3. Observation and Classification; 3.1 A Tour of Materials; 3.2 Examples of Modeling Classes of Materials; Chapter 4. Mathematical Terms; 4.1 Energy as a Function of Time, Position, and Direction; 4.2 Radiance; 4.3 Reflectance and BRDF; Chapter 5. General Material Models; 5.1 Reflection and Refraction from a Smooth Surface
5.2 Empirical Models5.3 Analytical First Principles Models; 5.4 Simulation from First Principles; 5.5 Spectral Effects; 5.6 Other Effects; 5.7 Scattering in Volumes; 5.8 Spatial Variations; Chapter 6. Specialized Material Models; 6.1 Natural Organic Materials; 6.2 Natural: Inorganic; 6.3 Materials in Manufactured Goods; Chapter 7. Measurement; 7.1 Traditional Measurement; 7.2 Image-Based BRDF Measurements of Sample Materials; 7.3 Measurement of Existing Objects; 7.4 Simultaneous Shape and Reflectance Capture; 7.5 Small-Scale Geometric Structures; 7.6 Alternative Representations
7.7 Subsurface Scattering and Volumetric Media7.8 Additional Dimensions; Chapter 8. Aging and Weathering; 8.1 Weathering Taxonomy; 8.2 Simulation of Weathering Effects; 8.3 Replication of Aged Appearance; 8.4 Capture, Analysis, and Transfer of Effects; Chapter 9. Specifying and Encoding Appearance Descriptions; 9.1 Practical Techniques for Appearance Specification; 9.2 Encoding Local Appearance Attributes; 9.3 Association of Material and Shape; Chapter 10. Rendering Appearance; 10.1 An Overview of Image Creation Techniques; 10.2 Simulating Global Illumination; 10.3 Rendering Local Appearance
10.4 Color and Tone10.5 Precomputed Rendering Elements; Bibliography; Index
Record Nr. UNINA-9910450786503321
Dorsey J (Julie)  
Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Digital modeling of material appearance [[electronic resource] /] / Julie Dorsey, Holly Rushmeier, François Sillion
Digital modeling of material appearance [[electronic resource] /] / Julie Dorsey, Holly Rushmeier, François Sillion
Autore Dorsey J (Julie)
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (329 p.)
Disciplina 006.6
Altri autori (Persone) RushmeierHolly E
SillionFrançois X
Collana The Morgan Kaufmann series in computer graphics
Soggetto topico Computer graphics
Visualization
Image processing - Digital techniques
ISBN 1-281-10000-5
9786611100001
0-08-055671-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Digital Modeling of Material Appearance; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Acknowledgments; Chapter 1. Introduction; Chapter 2. Background; 2.1 Light; 2.2 Human Perception and Judgments; 2.3 Image Synthesis; 2.4 Summary and Further Reading; Chapter 3. Observation and Classification; 3.1 A Tour of Materials; 3.2 Examples of Modeling Classes of Materials; Chapter 4. Mathematical Terms; 4.1 Energy as a Function of Time, Position, and Direction; 4.2 Radiance; 4.3 Reflectance and BRDF; Chapter 5. General Material Models; 5.1 Reflection and Refraction from a Smooth Surface
5.2 Empirical Models5.3 Analytical First Principles Models; 5.4 Simulation from First Principles; 5.5 Spectral Effects; 5.6 Other Effects; 5.7 Scattering in Volumes; 5.8 Spatial Variations; Chapter 6. Specialized Material Models; 6.1 Natural Organic Materials; 6.2 Natural: Inorganic; 6.3 Materials in Manufactured Goods; Chapter 7. Measurement; 7.1 Traditional Measurement; 7.2 Image-Based BRDF Measurements of Sample Materials; 7.3 Measurement of Existing Objects; 7.4 Simultaneous Shape and Reflectance Capture; 7.5 Small-Scale Geometric Structures; 7.6 Alternative Representations
7.7 Subsurface Scattering and Volumetric Media7.8 Additional Dimensions; Chapter 8. Aging and Weathering; 8.1 Weathering Taxonomy; 8.2 Simulation of Weathering Effects; 8.3 Replication of Aged Appearance; 8.4 Capture, Analysis, and Transfer of Effects; Chapter 9. Specifying and Encoding Appearance Descriptions; 9.1 Practical Techniques for Appearance Specification; 9.2 Encoding Local Appearance Attributes; 9.3 Association of Material and Shape; Chapter 10. Rendering Appearance; 10.1 An Overview of Image Creation Techniques; 10.2 Simulating Global Illumination; 10.3 Rendering Local Appearance
10.4 Color and Tone10.5 Precomputed Rendering Elements; Bibliography; Index
Record Nr. UNINA-9910784702403321
Dorsey J (Julie)  
Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Electronic design automation [[electronic resource] ] : synthesis, verification, and test / / edited by Laung-Terng Wang, Yao-Wen Chang, Kwang-Ting (Tim) Cheng
Electronic design automation [[electronic resource] ] : synthesis, verification, and test / / edited by Laung-Terng Wang, Yao-Wen Chang, Kwang-Ting (Tim) Cheng
Autore Wang Laung-Terng
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2009
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (971 p.)
Disciplina 621.3810285
621.39/5 22
Altri autori (Persone) WangLaung-Terng
ChangYao-Wen <1966->
ChengKwang-Ting <1961->
Collana The Morgan Kaufmann series in systems on silicon
Soggetto topico Electronic circuit design - Data processing
Computer-aided design
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-282-54215-X
9786612542152
0-08-092200-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Electronic Design Automation: Synthesis, Verification, and Test; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; In the Classroom; Acknowledgments; Contributors; About the Editors; CHAPTER 1 Introduction; 1.1 Overview of electronic design automation; 1.2 Logic design automation; 1.3 Test automation; 1.4 Physical design automation; 1.5 Concluding remarks; 1.6 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 2 Fundamentals of CMOS design; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Integrated circuit technology; 2.3 CMOS logic; 2.4 Integrated circuit design techniques; 2.5 CMOS physical design
2.6 Low-power circuit design techniques2.7 Concluding remarks; 2.8 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 3 Design for testability; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Testability analysis; 3.3 Scan design; 3.4 Logic built-in self-test; 3.5 Test Compression; 3.6 Concluding remarks; 3.7 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 4 Fundamentals of algorithms; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Computational complexity; 4.3 Graph algorithms; 4.4 Heuristic algorithms; 4.5 Mathematical programming; 4.6 Concluding remarks; 4.7 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References
CHAPTER 5 Electronic system-level design and high-level synthesis5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Fundamentals of High-level synthesis; 5.3 High-level synthesis algorithm overview; 5.4 Scheduling; 5.5 Register binding; 5.6 Functional unit binding; 5.7 Concluding remarks; 5.8 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 6 Logic synthesis in a nutshell; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 Data Structures for Boolean representation and reasoning; 6.3 Combinational logic minimization; 6.4 Technology mapping; 6.5 Timing analysis; 6.6 Timing optimization; 6.7 Concluding remarks; 6.8 Exercises; Acknowledgments
ReferencesCHAPTER 7 Test synthesis; 7.1 Introduction; 7.2 Scan design; 7.3 Logic built-in self-test (BIST) design.; 7.4 RTL Design for testability; 7.5 Concluding remarks; 7.6 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 8 Logic and circuit simulation; 8.1 Introduction; 8.2 Logic simulation models; 8.3 Logic simulation techniques; 8.4 Hardware-accelerated logic simulation; 8.5 Circuit simulation models; 8.6 Numerical methods for transient analysis; 8.7 Simulation of VLSI interconnects; 8.8 Simulation of nonlinear devices; 8.9 Concluding remarks; 8.10 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References
CHAPTER 9 Functional verification9.1 Introduction; 9.2 Verification hierarchy; 9.3 Measuring verification quality; 9.4 Simulation-based approach; 9.5 Formal approaches; 9.6 Advanced research; 9.7 Concluding remarks; 9.8 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 10 Floorplanning; 10.1 Introduction; 10.2 Simulated annealing approach; 10.3 Analytical approach; 10.4 Modern floorplanning considerations; 10.5 Concluding remarks; 10.6 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 11 Placement; 11.1 Introduction; 11.2 Problem formulations; 11.3 Global placement: partitioning-based approach
11.4 Global placement: simulated annealing approach
Record Nr. UNINA-9910480182803321
Wang Laung-Terng  
Amsterdam, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2009
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Electronic design automation [[electronic resource] ] : synthesis, verification, and test / / edited by Laung-Terng Wang, Yao-Wen Chang, Kwang-Ting (Tim) Cheng
Electronic design automation [[electronic resource] ] : synthesis, verification, and test / / edited by Laung-Terng Wang, Yao-Wen Chang, Kwang-Ting (Tim) Cheng
Autore Wang Laung-Terng
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2009
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (971 p.)
Disciplina 621.3810285
621.39/5 22
Altri autori (Persone) WangLaung-Terng
ChangYao-Wen <1966->
ChengKwang-Ting <1961->
Collana The Morgan Kaufmann series in systems on silicon
Soggetto topico Electronic circuit design - Data processing
Computer-aided design
ISBN 1-282-54215-X
9786612542152
0-08-092200-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Electronic Design Automation: Synthesis, Verification, and Test; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; In the Classroom; Acknowledgments; Contributors; About the Editors; CHAPTER 1 Introduction; 1.1 Overview of electronic design automation; 1.2 Logic design automation; 1.3 Test automation; 1.4 Physical design automation; 1.5 Concluding remarks; 1.6 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 2 Fundamentals of CMOS design; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Integrated circuit technology; 2.3 CMOS logic; 2.4 Integrated circuit design techniques; 2.5 CMOS physical design
2.6 Low-power circuit design techniques2.7 Concluding remarks; 2.8 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 3 Design for testability; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Testability analysis; 3.3 Scan design; 3.4 Logic built-in self-test; 3.5 Test Compression; 3.6 Concluding remarks; 3.7 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 4 Fundamentals of algorithms; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Computational complexity; 4.3 Graph algorithms; 4.4 Heuristic algorithms; 4.5 Mathematical programming; 4.6 Concluding remarks; 4.7 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References
CHAPTER 5 Electronic system-level design and high-level synthesis5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Fundamentals of High-level synthesis; 5.3 High-level synthesis algorithm overview; 5.4 Scheduling; 5.5 Register binding; 5.6 Functional unit binding; 5.7 Concluding remarks; 5.8 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 6 Logic synthesis in a nutshell; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 Data Structures for Boolean representation and reasoning; 6.3 Combinational logic minimization; 6.4 Technology mapping; 6.5 Timing analysis; 6.6 Timing optimization; 6.7 Concluding remarks; 6.8 Exercises; Acknowledgments
ReferencesCHAPTER 7 Test synthesis; 7.1 Introduction; 7.2 Scan design; 7.3 Logic built-in self-test (BIST) design.; 7.4 RTL Design for testability; 7.5 Concluding remarks; 7.6 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 8 Logic and circuit simulation; 8.1 Introduction; 8.2 Logic simulation models; 8.3 Logic simulation techniques; 8.4 Hardware-accelerated logic simulation; 8.5 Circuit simulation models; 8.6 Numerical methods for transient analysis; 8.7 Simulation of VLSI interconnects; 8.8 Simulation of nonlinear devices; 8.9 Concluding remarks; 8.10 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References
CHAPTER 9 Functional verification9.1 Introduction; 9.2 Verification hierarchy; 9.3 Measuring verification quality; 9.4 Simulation-based approach; 9.5 Formal approaches; 9.6 Advanced research; 9.7 Concluding remarks; 9.8 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 10 Floorplanning; 10.1 Introduction; 10.2 Simulated annealing approach; 10.3 Analytical approach; 10.4 Modern floorplanning considerations; 10.5 Concluding remarks; 10.6 Exercises; Acknowledgments; References; CHAPTER 11 Placement; 11.1 Introduction; 11.2 Problem formulations; 11.3 Global placement: partitioning-based approach
11.4 Global placement: simulated annealing approach
Record Nr. UNINA-9910783095403321
Wang Laung-Terng  
Amsterdam, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2009
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Emerging trends in ICT security / / edited by Babak Akhgar, Hamid R. Arabnia
Emerging trends in ICT security / / edited by Babak Akhgar, Hamid R. Arabnia
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Waltham, Massachusetts : , : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, , [2014]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (662 p.)
Disciplina 005.8
Altri autori (Persone) AkhgarBabak
ArabniaHamid
Soggetto topico Information technology - Security measures
Computer crimes - Prevention
Cyberterrorism - Prevention
Electronic surveillance
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 0-12-410487-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Emerging Trends in ICT Security; Copyright Page; Contents; Acknowledgments; Review Board; About the Editors; List of Contributors; Preface; 1 Information and Systems Security; 1 Theory/Reviews of the Field; 1 System Security Engineering for Information Systems; Introduction; System security engineering history; The system security engineering process; The revitalization of system security engineering; Established system security engineering methods, processes, and tools; Acquisition program protection planning; Information assurance; Systems engineering critical reviews
Modern and emerging system security engineering methods, processes, and tools Discovery and understanding of complex systems for security; Mission assurance; Formalized security requirements; Early design considerations; Plan for failure; Security and system patterns; Leveraging system architectures for security; Agile and self-organizing system security; Security metrics and evaluation; Identified SSE research areas; Conclusion; Recommendations; Disclaimer; Acknowledgments; References; Further reading; 2 Metrics and Indicators as Key Organizational Assets for ICT Security Assessment
Introduction GOCAME strategy overview; GOCAME conceptual framework; GOCAME process and the W5H rule; Security evaluation for a web system: A proof of concept; Target entity and information need; Security characteristic specification; Metric and indicator specifications; Implementing the M&E; Risk and security vulnerability issues; Metrics and indicators for repeatable and consistent analysis: a discussion; Related work; Conclusion and future work; References; 3 A Fresh Look at Semantic Natural Language Information Assurance and Security: NL IAS from Watermarking and Downgrading to...
Introduction Early breakthrough in NL IAS; The conceptual foundation of NL IAS; NL IA applications; NL watermarking; NL tamperproofing; NL sanitizing/downgrading; NL steganography and steganalysis; A sketch of ontological semantic technology; Mature semantic NL IAS; Semantic forensics; Unintended inferences and the meaning of the unsaid; Situational conceptual defaults; The term, its origins, and the canonical case; Default reversal; Are defaults really common sense knowledge?; Underdetermination of reality by language; Scripts; Anonymization; Summary; Acknowledgments; References; 2 Methods
4 An Approach to Facilitate Security Assurance for Information Sharing and Exchange in Big-Data Applications Introduction; UML extensions for XML security; Extensions for policy modeling and integration; Integrating local security policies into a global security policy; Assumptions and equivalence finding; Integration process for local SPSS; Resolving conflicts of integrated security rule sets; Creating the global SPSS; Related work; Conclusion; References; 5 Gamification of Information Security Awareness Training; Introduction; Literature review; General concepts; Serious games
Games adoption in multiple domains
Record Nr. UNINA-9910453222903321
Waltham, Massachusetts : , : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, , [2014]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Managing time in relational databases [[electronic resource] ] : how to design, update and query temporal data / / Tom Johnston, Randall Weis
Managing time in relational databases [[electronic resource] ] : how to design, update and query temporal data / / Tom Johnston, Randall Weis
Autore Johnston Tom
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2010
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (502 p.)
Disciplina 005.753
005.756
Altri autori (Persone) WeisRandall
Soggetto topico Temporal databases
Relational databases
Database management
Querying (Computer science)
ISBN 1-282-69983-0
9786612699832
0-08-096337-4
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto pt. 1. An introduction to temporal data management -- pt. 2. An introduction to asserted versioning -- pt. 3. Designing, maintaining and querying asserted version databases.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910781166703321
Johnston Tom  
Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2010
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Physical database design [[electronic resource] ] : the database professional's guide to exploiting indexes, views, storage, and more / / Sam Lightstone, Toby Teorey, Tom Nadeau
Physical database design [[electronic resource] ] : the database professional's guide to exploiting indexes, views, storage, and more / / Sam Lightstone, Toby Teorey, Tom Nadeau
Autore Lightstone Sam
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2007
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (449 p.)
Disciplina 005.74
Altri autori (Persone) TeoreyToby J
NadeauTom <1958->
Collana The Morgan Kaufmann series in data management systems
Soggetto topico Database design
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-281-04654-X
9786611046545
0-08-055231-5
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Physical Database Design; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; Organization; Usage Examples; Literature Summaries and Bibliography; Feedback and Errata; Acknowledgments; Chapter 1. Introduction to Physical Database Design; 1.1 Motivation-The Growth of Data and Increasing Relevance of Physical Database Design; 1.2 Database Life Cycle; 1.3 Elements of Physical Design: Indexing, Partitioning, and Clustering; 1.4 Why Physical Design Is Hard; 1.5 Literature Summary; Chapter 2. Basic Indexing Methods; 2.1 B+tree Index; 2.2 Composite Index Search; 2.3 Bitmap Indexing
2.4 Record Identifiers 2.5 Summary; 2.6 Literature Summary; Chapter 3. Query Optimization and Plan Selection; 3.1 Query Processing and Optimization; 3.2 Useful Optimization Features in Database Systems; 3.3 Query Cost Evaluation-An Example; 3.4 Query Execution Plan Development; 3.5 Selectivity Factors, Table Size, and Query Cost Estimation; 3.6 Summary; 3.7 Literature Summary; Chapter 4. Selecting Indexes; 4.1 Indexing Concepts and Terminology; 4.2 Indexing Rules of Thumb; 4.3 Index Selection Decisions; 4.4 Join Index Selection; 4.5 Summary; 4.6 Literature Summary
Chapter 5. Selecting Materialized Views 5.1 Simple View Materialization; 5.2 Exploiting Commonality; 5.3 Exploiting Grouping and Generalization; 5.4 Resource Considerations; 5.5 Examples: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly; 5.6 Usage Syntax and Examples; 5.7 Summary; 5.8 Literature Review; Chapter 6. Shared-nothing Partitioning; 6.1 Understanding Shared-nothing Partitioning; 6.2 More Key Concepts and Terms; 6.3 Hash Partitioning; 6.4 Pros and Cons of Shared Nothing; 6.5 Use in OLTP Systems; 6.6 Design Challenges: Skew and Join Collocation
6.7 Database Design Tips for Reducing Cross-node Data Shipping 6.8 Topology Design; 6.9 Where the Money Goes; 6.10 Grid Computing; 6.11 Summary; 6.12 Literature Summary; Chapter 7. Range Partitioning; 7.1 Range Partitioning Basics; 7.2 List Partitioning; 7.3 Syntax Examples; 7.4 Administration and Fast Roll-in and Roll-out; 7.5 Increased Addressability; 7.6 Partition Elimination; 7.7 Indexing Range Partitioned Data; 7.8 Range Partitioning and Clustering Indexes; 7.9 The Full Gestalt: Composite Range and Hash Partitioning with Multidimensional Clustering; 7.10 Summary; 7.11 Literature Summary
Chapter 8. Multidimensional Clustering 8.1 Understanding MDC; 8.2 Performance Benefits of MDC; 8.3 Not Just Query Performance: Designing for Roll-in and Roll-out; 8.4 Examples of Queries Benefiting from MDC; 8.5 Storage Considerations; 8.6 Designing MDC Tables; 8.7 Summary; 8.8 Literature Summary; Chapter 9. The Interdependence Problem; 9.1 Strong and Weak Dependency Analysis; 9.2 Pain-first Waterfall Strategy; 9.3 Impact-.rst Waterfall Strategy; 9.4 Greedy Algorithm for Change Management; 9.5 The Popular Strategy (the Chicken Soup Algorithm); 9.6 Summary; 9.7 Literature Summary
Chapter 10. Counting and Data Sampling in Physical Design Exploration
Record Nr. UNINA-9910458663703321
Lightstone Sam  
Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2007
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Physical database design [[electronic resource] ] : the database professional's guide to exploiting indexes, views, storage, and more / / Sam Lightstone, Toby Teorey, Tom Nadeau
Physical database design [[electronic resource] ] : the database professional's guide to exploiting indexes, views, storage, and more / / Sam Lightstone, Toby Teorey, Tom Nadeau
Autore Lightstone Sam
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2007
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (449 p.)
Disciplina 005.74
Altri autori (Persone) TeoreyToby J
NadeauTom <1958->
Collana The Morgan Kaufmann series in data management systems
Soggetto topico Database design
ISBN 1-281-04654-X
9786611046545
0-08-055231-5
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Physical Database Design; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; Organization; Usage Examples; Literature Summaries and Bibliography; Feedback and Errata; Acknowledgments; Chapter 1. Introduction to Physical Database Design; 1.1 Motivation-The Growth of Data and Increasing Relevance of Physical Database Design; 1.2 Database Life Cycle; 1.3 Elements of Physical Design: Indexing, Partitioning, and Clustering; 1.4 Why Physical Design Is Hard; 1.5 Literature Summary; Chapter 2. Basic Indexing Methods; 2.1 B+tree Index; 2.2 Composite Index Search; 2.3 Bitmap Indexing
2.4 Record Identifiers 2.5 Summary; 2.6 Literature Summary; Chapter 3. Query Optimization and Plan Selection; 3.1 Query Processing and Optimization; 3.2 Useful Optimization Features in Database Systems; 3.3 Query Cost Evaluation-An Example; 3.4 Query Execution Plan Development; 3.5 Selectivity Factors, Table Size, and Query Cost Estimation; 3.6 Summary; 3.7 Literature Summary; Chapter 4. Selecting Indexes; 4.1 Indexing Concepts and Terminology; 4.2 Indexing Rules of Thumb; 4.3 Index Selection Decisions; 4.4 Join Index Selection; 4.5 Summary; 4.6 Literature Summary
Chapter 5. Selecting Materialized Views 5.1 Simple View Materialization; 5.2 Exploiting Commonality; 5.3 Exploiting Grouping and Generalization; 5.4 Resource Considerations; 5.5 Examples: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly; 5.6 Usage Syntax and Examples; 5.7 Summary; 5.8 Literature Review; Chapter 6. Shared-nothing Partitioning; 6.1 Understanding Shared-nothing Partitioning; 6.2 More Key Concepts and Terms; 6.3 Hash Partitioning; 6.4 Pros and Cons of Shared Nothing; 6.5 Use in OLTP Systems; 6.6 Design Challenges: Skew and Join Collocation
6.7 Database Design Tips for Reducing Cross-node Data Shipping 6.8 Topology Design; 6.9 Where the Money Goes; 6.10 Grid Computing; 6.11 Summary; 6.12 Literature Summary; Chapter 7. Range Partitioning; 7.1 Range Partitioning Basics; 7.2 List Partitioning; 7.3 Syntax Examples; 7.4 Administration and Fast Roll-in and Roll-out; 7.5 Increased Addressability; 7.6 Partition Elimination; 7.7 Indexing Range Partitioned Data; 7.8 Range Partitioning and Clustering Indexes; 7.9 The Full Gestalt: Composite Range and Hash Partitioning with Multidimensional Clustering; 7.10 Summary; 7.11 Literature Summary
Chapter 8. Multidimensional Clustering 8.1 Understanding MDC; 8.2 Performance Benefits of MDC; 8.3 Not Just Query Performance: Designing for Roll-in and Roll-out; 8.4 Examples of Queries Benefiting from MDC; 8.5 Storage Considerations; 8.6 Designing MDC Tables; 8.7 Summary; 8.8 Literature Summary; Chapter 9. The Interdependence Problem; 9.1 Strong and Weak Dependency Analysis; 9.2 Pain-first Waterfall Strategy; 9.3 Impact-.rst Waterfall Strategy; 9.4 Greedy Algorithm for Change Management; 9.5 The Popular Strategy (the Chicken Soup Algorithm); 9.6 Summary; 9.7 Literature Summary
Chapter 10. Counting and Data Sampling in Physical Design Exploration
Record Nr. UNINA-9910784649703321
Lightstone Sam  
Amsterdam ; ; Boston, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2007
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Physically based rendering [[electronic resource] ] : from theory to implementation
Physically based rendering [[electronic resource] ] : from theory to implementation
Autore Pharr Matt
Edizione [2nd ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Burlington, MA, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2010
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (1200 p.)
Disciplina 006.66
006.693
Soggetto topico Computer graphics
Computer-aided design
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 0-12-378580-4
0-08-092359-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Physically Based Rendering: From Theory to Implementation; Copyright Page; Dedication; About the Authors; Contents; Preface; Audience; Overview and Goals; Changes Since the First Edition; Acknowledgments; About the Cover; Additional Reading; Chapter One: Introduction; 1.1 Literate Programming; 1.2 Photorealistic Rendering and the Ray-Tracing Algorithm; 1.3 pbrt: System Overview; 1.4 How to Proceed Through this Book; 1.5 Using and Understanding the Code; Further Reading; Exercise; Chapter Two: Geometry and Transformations; 2.1 Coordinate Systems; 2.2 Vectors; 2.3 Points
2.4 Normals2.5 Rays; 2.6 Three-Dimensional Bounding Boxes; 2.7 Transformations; 2.8 Applying Transformations; 2.9 Animating Transformations; 2.10 Differential Geometry; Further Reading; Exercises; Chapter Three: Shapes; 3.1 Basic Shape Interface; 3.2 Spheres; 3.3 Cylinders; 3.4 Disks; 3.5 Other Quadrics; 3.6 Triangles and Meshes; 3.7 Subdivision Surfaces; Further Reading; Exercises; Chapter Four: Primitives and Intersection Acceleration; 4.1 Primitive Interface and Geometric Primitives; 4.2 Aggregates; 4.3 Grid Accelerator; 4.4 Bounding Volume Hierarchies; 4.5 Kd-Tree Accelerator
4.6 Debugging AggregatesFurther Reading; Exercises; Chapter Five: Color and Radiometry; 5.1 Spectral Representation; 5.2 The SampledSpectrum Class; 5.3 RGBSpectrum Implementation; 5.4 Basic Radiometry; 5.5 Working with Radiometric Integrals; 5.6 Surface Reflection; Further Reading; Exercises; Chapter Six: Camera Models; 6.1 Camera Model; 6.2 Projective Camera Models; 6.3 Environment Camera; Further Reading; Exercises; Chapter Seven: Sampling and Reconstruction; 7.1 Sampling Theory; 7.2 Image Sampling Interface; 7.3 Stratified Sampling; 7.4 Low-Discrepancy Sampling
7.5 Best-Candidate Sampling Patterns7.6 Adaptive Sampling; 7.7 Image Reconstruction; 7.8 Film and The Imaging Pipeline; Further Reading; Exercises; Chapter Eight: Reflection Models; 8.1 Basic Interface; 8.2 Specular Reflection and Transmission; 8.3 Lambertian Reflection; 8.4 Microfacet Models; 8.5 Fresnel Incidence Effects; 8.6 Measured BRDFs; Further Reading; Exercises; Chapter Nine: Materials; 9.1 BSDFs; 9.2 Material Interface and Implementations; 9.3 Bump Mapping; Further Reading; Exercises; Chapter Ten: Texture; 10.1 Sampling and Antialiasing; 10.2 Texture Coordinate Generation
10.3 Texture Interface and Basic Textures10.4 Image Texture; 10.5 Solid and Procedural Texturing; 10.6 Noise; Further Reading; Exercises; Chapter Eleven: Volume Scattering; 11.1 Volume Scattering Processes; 11.2 Phase Functions; 11.3 Volume Interface and Homogeneous Media; 11.4 Varying-Density Volumes; 11.5 Volume Aggregates; 11.6 The BSSRDF; Further Reading; Exercises; Chapter Twelve: Light Sources; 12.1 Light Interface; 12.2 Point Lights; 12.3 Distant Lights; 12.4 Area Lights; 12.5 Infinite Area Lights; Further Reading; Exercises; Chapter Thirteen: Monte Carlo Integration I: Basic Concepts
13.1 Background and Probability Review
Record Nr. UNINA-9910456418603321
Pharr Matt  
Burlington, MA, : Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier, c2010
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