We thank the authors of all submissions for their interest in DBPL. It is great to learn how many colleagues around the globe work in the exciting DB ⋂ PL intersection.
For the 2025 edition of DBPL, we have accepted the following seven papers (in no particular order):
JTutor: JSON Schema Validation Explained
Lyes Attouche (Universite Paris-Dauphine), Mohamed-Amine Baazizi (Sorbonne Universite), Dario Colazzo (Universite Paris-Dauphine), Giorgio Ghelli (Universita di Pisa), Kachimsirikwuo Caleb Imo (University of Passau), Stefan Klessinger (University of Passau)*, Carlo Sartiani (Universita della Basilicata), Stefanie Scherzinger (University of Passau)
Static Typing Meets Adaptive Optimization: A Unified Approach to Recursive Queries
Anna Herlihy (EPFL)*, Anastasia Ailamaki (EPFL), Martin Odersky (EPFL)
Towards Automatically Extracting the Relational Model of an Operating System
Brian Choi (Yale University ), George Neville-Neil (Yale University ), Alex Yuan (Yale University), Avi Silberschatz (Yale University ), Peter Alvaro (UCSC), Robert Soulé (Yale University)*
BIRNE: Mixed-paradigm Workload Execution in SQL Engines
Tim Fischer (Universität Tübingen)*, Denis Hirn (Universität Tübingen)
Efficient Enumeration of the Complete Join Search Space
Altan Birler (TUM)*, Thomas Neumann (TUM)
Cascade: From Imperative Code to Stateful Dataflows
Marcus Schutte (Deflt University of Technology)*, Lucas Mol, van (Delft University of Technology), George Christodoulou (Delft University of Technology), Asterios Katsifodimos (Delft University of Technology)
Finitary Relational Calculus
Fritz Henglein (University of Copenhagen)*, Mads Rehof (University of Copenhagen), Mikkel Kragh Matthiesen (University of Denmark)
Our thanks go to the DBPL 2025 PC for their diligent and timely work that helped to shape the workshop's program.