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facility into a database system provides a uniform mechanism for a number of 
advanced database features including integrity constraint enforcement, derived 
data maintenance, triggers, alerters, protection, version control, and others. 
In addition, a database system with rule processing capabilities provides a 
useful platform for large and efficient knowledge-base and expert systems. 
Database systems with production rules are referred to as active database 
systems, 
 and the field of active database systems has indeed been active. This chapter 
summarizes current work in active database systems  topics covered include 
active database rule models and languages, rule execution semantics, and 
implementation issues.  1 Introduction  Conventional database systems are 
passive  they only execute queries or transactions explicitly submitted by a 
user or an application program. For many applications, however, it is important 
to monitor situations of interest, and to ... CiteSeerX ACM Press 2009-04-12 
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selectively modify the atomicity and isolation properties. In this chapter we 
discuss the application  of transaction concepts to activities that involve 
coordinated execution of multiple tasks (possibly of  different types) over 
different processing entities. Such applications are referred to as 
transactional  workflows. In this chapter we discuss the specification of such 
workflows
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Workflows are activities involving the coordinated execution of multiple tasks 
performed by different processing entities. A task defines some work to be done 
and can be specified in a number of ways, including a textual description in a 
file or an email, a form, a message, or a computer program. A processing entity 
that performs the tasks may be a person or a software system (e.g., a mailer, 
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the relative merits of object-oriented languages with classes and inheritance 
as opposed to those with prototypes and delegation. It has become clear that 
the object-oriented programming language design space is not a dichotomy. 
Instead, we have identified two fundamental mechanisms---templates and  
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Templates create new objects in their o
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Delegation  system, Self, and Hybrid each take differing stands on the forms of 
templates  1  Smalltalk-80  TM  is a trademark of Par CiteSeerX ACM Press 
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diff --git 
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b/asterixdb/asterix-app/src/test/resources/runtimets/results/fuzzyjoin/dblp-csx-4.3.2/dblp-csx-4.3.2.adm
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Heytens William Kent", "misc": "2002-01-03 42-68 1995 Modern Database Systems 
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editor Modern Database Systems The Object Model Integrating a production rules 
facility into a database system provides a uniform mechanism for a number of 
advanced database features including integrity constraint enforcement, derived 
data maintenance, triggers, alerters, protection, version control, and others. 
In addition, a database system with rule processing capabilities provides a 
useful platform for large and efficient knowledge-base and expert systems. 
Database systems with production rules are referred to as active database 
systems, 
 and the field of active database systems has indeed been active. This chapter 
summarizes current work in active database systems  topics covered include 
active database rule models and languages, rule execution semantics, and 
implementation issues.  1 Introduction  Conventional database systems are 
passive  they only execute queries or transactions explicitly submitted by a 
user or an application program. For many applications, however, it is important 
to monitor situations of interest, and to ... CiteSeerX ACM Press 2009-04-12 
2007-11-22 1994 application/postscript text http 
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//www-db.stanford.edu/pub/papers/book-chapter.ps en 10.1.1.17.1323 
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"Specification and Execution of Transactional Workflows.", "authors": "Marek 
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}, "brec": { "id": 88, "csxid": "oai CiteSeerXPSU 10.1.1.43.3839", "title": 
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evolved over time to incorporate more complex transaction structures  and to 
selectively modify the atomicity and isolation properties. In this chapter we 
discuss the application  of transaction concepts to activities that involve 
coordinated execution of multiple tasks (possibly of  different types) over 
different processing entities. Such applications are referred to as 
transactional  workflows. In this chapter we discuss the specification of such 
workflows
  and the issues involved in their  execution.  1 What is a Workflow?  
Workflows are activities involving the coordinated execution of multiple tasks 
performed by different processing entities. A task defines some work to be done 
and can be specified in a number of ways, including a textual description in a 
file or an email, a form, a message, or a computer program. A processing entity 
that performs the tasks may be a person or a software system (e.g., a mailer, 
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Shared View of Sharing  The Treaty of Orlando.", "authors": "Lynn Andrea Stein 
Henry Lieberman David Ungar", "misc": "2002-01-03 31-48 1989 Object-Oriented 
Concepts, Databases, and Applications 
db/books/collections/kim89.html#SteinLU89" }, "brec": { "id": 91, "csxid": "oai 
CiteSeerXPSU 10.1.1.55.482", "title": "A Shared View of Sharing  The Treaty of 
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"2009-04-12 Introduction For the past few years, researchers have been debating 
the relative merits of object-oriented languages with classes and inheritance 
as opposed to those with prototypes and delegation. It has become clear that 
the object-oriented programming language design space is not a dichotomy. 
Instead, we have identified two fundamental mechanisms---templates and  
empathy---and several different independent degrees of freedom for each. 
Templates create new objects in their o
 wn image, providing guarantees about the similarity of group members. Empathy 
allows an object to act as if it were some other object, thus providing sharing 
of state and behavior. The Smalltalk-80  TM  language,  1  Actors, Lieberman's 
Delegation  system, Self, and Hybrid each take differing stands on the forms of 
templates  1  Smalltalk-80  TM  is a trademark of Par CiteSeerX ACM Press 
2009-04-12 2007-11-22 1989 application/postscript text http 
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{ "id": 2, "csxid": "books/acm/kim95/AnnevelinkACFHK95", "title": "Object SQL - 
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db/books/collections/kim95.html#AnnevelinkACFHK95" }, "cred": { "id": 2, 
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Annevelink Rafiul Ahad Amelia Carlson Daniel H. Fishman Michael L. Heyt
 ens William Kent", "misc": "2002-01-03 42-68 1995 Modern Database Systems 
db/books/collections/kim95.html#AnnevelinkACFHK95" }, "drec": { "id": 2, 
"csxid": "books/acm/kim95/AnnevelinkACFHK95", "title": "Object SQL - A Language 
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Annevelink Rafiul Ahad Amelia Carlson Daniel H. Fishman Michael L. Heytens 
William Kent", "misc": "2002-01-03 42-68 1995 Modern Database Systems 
db/books/collections/kim95.html#AnnevelinkACFHK95" } }
+{ "arec": { "id": 2, "dblpid": "books/acm/kim95/Blakeley95", "title": 
"OQL[C++]  Extending C++ with an Object Query Capability.", "authors": "José 
A. Blakeley", "misc": "2002-01-03 69-88 Modern Database Systems 
db/books/collections/kim95.html#Blakeley95 1995" }, "brec": { "id": 4, "csxid": 
"books/acm/kim95/Blakeley95", "title": "OQL[C++]  Extending C++ with an Object 
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Modern Database Systems db/books/collections/kim95.html#Blakeley95 1995" }, 
"cred": { "id": 4, "csxid": "books/acm/kim95/Blakeley95", "title": "OQL[C++]  
Extending C++ with an Object Query Capability.", "authors": "José A. 
Blakeley", "misc": "2002-01-03 69-88 Modern Database Systems 
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"books/acm/kim95/Blakeley95", "title": "OQL[C++]  Extending C++ with an Object 
Query Capability.", "authors": "José A. Blakeley", "misc": "2002-01-03 69-88 
Modern Database Systems db
 /books/collections/kim95.html#Blakeley95 1995" } }
+{ "arec": { "id": 5, "dblpid": "books/acm/kim95/DayalHW95", "title": "Active 
Database Systems.", "authors": "Umeshwar Dayal Eric N. Hanson Jennifer Widom", 
"misc": "2002-01-03 434-456 1995 Modern Database Systems 
db/books/collections/kim95.html#DayalHW95" }, "brec": { "id": 98, "csxid": "oai 
CiteSeerXPSU 10.1.1.49.2910", "title": "Active Database Systems", "authors": 
"Umeshwar Dayal Eric N. Hanson Jennifer Widom", "misc": "2009-04-12 In Won Kim 
editor Modern Database Systems The Object Model Integrating a production rules 
facility into a database system provides a uniform mechanism for a number of 
advanced database features including integrity constraint enforcement, derived 
data maintenance, triggers, alerters, protection, version control, and others. 
In addition, a database system with rule processing capabilities provides a 
useful platform for large and efficient knowledge-base and expert systems. 
Database systems with production rules are referred to as active database 
systems, 
 and the field of active database systems has indeed been active. This chapter 
summarizes current work in active database systems  topics covered include 
active database rule models and languages, rule execution semantics, and 
implementation issues.  1 Introduction  Conventional database systems are 
passive  they only execute queries or transactions explicitly submitted by a 
user or an application program. For many applications, however, it is important 
to monitor situations of interest, and to ... CiteSeerX ACM Press 2009-04-12 
2007-11-22 1994 application/postscript text http 
//citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.49.2910 http 
//www-db.stanford.edu/pub/papers/book-chapter.ps en 10.1.1.17.1323 
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10.1.1.49.2910", "title": "Active Database Systems", "authors": "Umeshwar Dayal 
Eric N. Hanson Jennifer Widom", "misc": "2009-04-12 In Won Kim editor Modern 
Database Systems The Object Model Integrating a production rules facility into 
a database system provides a uniform mechanism for a number of advanced 
database features including integrity constraint enforcement, derived data 
maintenance, triggers, alerters, protection, version control, and others. In 
addition, a database system with rule processing capabilities provides a useful 
platform for large and efficient knowledge-base and expert systems. Database 
systems with production rules are referred to as active database systems, and 
the field of active database systems has indeed been active. This chapter 
summarizes current work in active database systems  topics covered include 
active database rule models and languages, rule execution semantics, and implem
 entation issues.  1 Introduction  Conventional database systems are passive  
they only execute queries or transactions explicitly submitted by a user or an 
application program. For many applications, however, it is important to monitor 
situations of interest, and to ... CiteSeerX ACM Press 2009-04-12 2007-11-22 
1994 application/postscript text http 
//citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.49.2910 http 
//www-db.stanford.edu/pub/papers/book-chapter.ps en 10.1.1.17.1323 
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10.1.1.48.6394 Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai 
identifier remains attached to it." }, "drec": { "id": 98, "csxid": "oai 
CiteSeerXPSU 10.1.1.49.2910", "title": "Active Database Systems", "authors": 
"Umeshwar Dayal Eric N. Hanson Jennifer Widom", "misc": "2009-04-12 In Won Kim 
editor Modern D
 atabase Systems The Object Model Integrating a production rules facility into 
a database system provides a uniform mechanism for a number of advanced 
database features including integrity constraint enforcement, derived data 
maintenance, triggers, alerters, protection, version control, and others. In 
addition, a database system with rule processing capabilities provides a useful 
platform for large and efficient knowledge-base and expert systems. Database 
systems with production rules are referred to as active database systems, and 
the field of active database systems has indeed been active. This chapter 
summarizes current work in active database systems  topics covered include 
active database rule models and languages, rule execution semantics, and 
implementation issues.  1 Introduction  Conventional database systems are 
passive  they only execute queries or transactions explicitly submitted by a 
user or an application program. For many applications, however, it is important 
to moni
 tor situations of interest, and to ... CiteSeerX ACM Press 2009-04-12 
2007-11-22 1994 application/postscript text http 
//citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.49.2910 http 
//www-db.stanford.edu/pub/papers/book-chapter.ps en 10.1.1.17.1323 
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10.1.1.48.6394 Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai 
identifier remains attached to it." } }
+{ "arec": { "id": 25, "dblpid": "books/acm/kim95/RusinkiewiczS95", "title": 
"Specification and Execution of Transactional Workflows.", "authors": "Marek 
Rusinkiewicz Amit P. Sheth", "misc": "2004-03-08 592-620 Modern Database 
Systems books/acm/Kim95 db/books/collections/kim95.html#RusinkiewiczS95 1995" 
}, "brec": { "id": 88, "csxid": "oai CiteSeerXPSU 10.1.1.43.3839", "title": 
"Specification and Execution of Transactional Workflows", "authors": "Marek 
Rusinkiewicz Amit Sheth", "misc": "2009-04-13 The basic transaction model has 
evolved over time to incorporate more complex transaction structures  and to 
selectively modify the atomicity and isolation properties. In this chapter we 
discuss the application  of transaction concepts to activities that involve 
coordinated execution of multiple tasks (possibly of  different types) over 
different processing entities. Such applications are referred to as 
transactional  workflows. In this chapter we discuss the specification of such 
workflows
  and the issues involved in their  execution.  1 What is a Workflow?  
Workflows are activities involving the coordinated execution of multiple tasks 
performed by different processing entities. A task defines some work to be done 
and can be specified in a number of ways, including a textual description in a 
file or an email, a form, a message, or a computer program. A processing entity 
that performs the tasks may be a person or a software system (e.g., a mailer, 
an application program, a database mana... CiteSeerX ACM Press 2009-04-13 
2007-11-22 1995 application/postscript text http 
//citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.43.3839 http 
//lsdis.cs.uga.edu/lib/././download/RS93.ps en 10.1.1.17.1323 10.1.1.59.5051 
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10.1.1.35.7733 10.1.1.52.3682 10.1.1.36.
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10.1.1.122.3737 10.1.1.127.1894 10.1.1.55.5674 10.1.1.37.8260 10.1.1.2.2077 
10.1.1.24.5782 10.1.1.19.780 10.1.1.2.4148 10.1.1.2.4173 10.1.1.131.902 
10.1.1.30.2927 Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai 
identifier remains attached to it." } }

http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/asterixdb/blob/d906bd89/asterixdb/asterix-app/src/test/resources/runtimets/results/fuzzyjoin/dblp-csx-aqlplus_6/dblp-csx-aqlplus_6.1.adm
----------------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git 
a/asterixdb/asterix-app/src/test/resources/runtimets/results/fuzzyjoin/dblp-csx-aqlplus_6/dblp-csx-aqlplus_6.1.adm
 
b/asterixdb/asterix-app/src/test/resources/runtimets/results/fuzzyjoin/dblp-csx-aqlplus_6/dblp-csx-aqlplus_6.1.adm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5083763
--- /dev/null
+++ 
b/asterixdb/asterix-app/src/test/resources/runtimets/results/fuzzyjoin/dblp-csx-aqlplus_6/dblp-csx-aqlplus_6.1.adm
@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
+{ "srec": 1, "trec": 2 }
+{ "srec": 2, "trec": 4 }
+{ "srec": 3, "trec": 1 }
+{ "srec": 4, "trec": 3 }
+{ "srec": 5, "trec": 98 }
+{ "srec": 25, "trec": 88 }
+{ "srec": 51, "trec": 92 }
+{ "srec": 51, "trec": 93 }
+{ "srec": 54, "trec": 91 }

http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/asterixdb/blob/d906bd89/asterixdb/asterix-app/src/test/resources/runtimets/testsuite.xml
----------------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git a/asterixdb/asterix-app/src/test/resources/runtimets/testsuite.xml 
b/asterixdb/asterix-app/src/test/resources/runtimets/testsuite.xml
index 91becf7..44daa6b 100644
--- a/asterixdb/asterix-app/src/test/resources/runtimets/testsuite.xml
+++ b/asterixdb/asterix-app/src/test/resources/runtimets/testsuite.xml
@@ -2379,6 +2379,66 @@
   -->
   <test-group name="fuzzyjoin">
     <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_1">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_1</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_1_1">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_1_1</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_1_2">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_1_2</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_1_3">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_1_3</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_2_1">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_2_1</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_2_2">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_2_2</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_2_3">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_2_3</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_2_4">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_2_4</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_2_5">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_2_5</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_2_6">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_2_6</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_2_7">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_2_7</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="basic-1_3_1">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">basic-1_3_1</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
       <compilation-unit name="dblp-1_1">
         <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-1_1</output-dir>
       </compilation-unit>
@@ -2476,7 +2536,7 @@
     <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
       <compilation-unit name="dblp-aqlplus_2">
         <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-aqlplus_2</output-dir>
-        <expected-error>Type mismatch: function similarity-jaccard expects its 
1st input parameter to be of type array or multiset, but the actual input type 
is string</expected-error>
+        <expected-error>Type mismatch: expected value of type array or 
multiset, but got the value of type string</expected-error>
       </compilation-unit>
     </test-case>
     <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
@@ -2580,6 +2640,46 @@
       </compilation-unit>
     </test-case>
     <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+        <compilation-unit name="dblp-csx-4.1.1">
+            <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-csx-4.1.1</output-dir>
+        </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+        <compilation-unit name="dblp-csx-4.1.2">
+            <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-csx-4.1.2</output-dir>
+        </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+        <compilation-unit name="dblp-csx-4.2.1">
+            <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-csx-4.2.1</output-dir>
+        </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+        <compilation-unit name="dblp-csx-4.2.2">
+            <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-csx-4.2.2</output-dir>
+        </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+        <compilation-unit name="dblp-csx-4.3.1">
+            <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-csx-4.3.1</output-dir>
+        </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+        <compilation-unit name="dblp-csx-4.3.2">
+            <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-csx-4.3.2</output-dir>
+        </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+        <compilation-unit name="dblp-csx-4.4.1">
+            <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-csx-4.4.1</output-dir>
+        </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+        <compilation-unit name="dblp-csx-4.4.2">
+            <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-csx-4.4.2</output-dir>
+        </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
       <compilation-unit name="dblp-csx-aqlplus_1">
         <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-csx-aqlplus_1</output-dir>
       </compilation-unit>
@@ -2605,6 +2705,11 @@
       </compilation-unit>
     </test-case>
     <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
+      <compilation-unit name="dblp-csx-aqlplus_6">
+        <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-csx-aqlplus_6</output-dir>
+      </compilation-unit>
+    </test-case>
+    <test-case FilePath="fuzzyjoin">
       <compilation-unit name="dblp-csx-dblp-aqlplus_1">
         <output-dir compare="Text">dblp-csx-dblp-aqlplus_1</output-dir>
       </compilation-unit>

http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/asterixdb/blob/d906bd89/asterixdb/asterix-common/src/main/java/org/apache/asterix/common/exceptions/ErrorCode.java
----------------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git 
a/asterixdb/asterix-common/src/main/java/org/apache/asterix/common/exceptions/ErrorCode.java
 
b/asterixdb/asterix-common/src/main/java/org/apache/asterix/common/exceptions/ErrorCode.java
index 3fbce28..dda6f7b 100644
--- 
a/asterixdb/asterix-common/src/main/java/org/apache/asterix/common/exceptions/ErrorCode.java
+++ 
b/asterixdb/asterix-common/src/main/java/org/apache/asterix/common/exceptions/ErrorCode.java
@@ -178,6 +178,7 @@ public class ErrorCode {
     public static final int ARRAY_FIELD_ELEMENTS_MUST_BE_OF_TYPE = 1090;
     public static final int COMPILATION_TYPE_MISMATCH_GENERIC = 1091;
     public static final int ILLEGAL_SET_PARAMETER = 1092;
+    public static final int COMPILATION_TRANSLATION_ERROR = 1093;
 
     // Feed errors
     public static final int DATAFLOW_ILLEGAL_STATE = 3001;

http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/asterixdb/blob/d906bd89/asterixdb/asterix-common/src/main/resources/asx_errormsg/en.properties
----------------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git 
a/asterixdb/asterix-common/src/main/resources/asx_errormsg/en.properties 
b/asterixdb/asterix-common/src/main/resources/asx_errormsg/en.properties
index 7158b95..4c8c866 100644
--- a/asterixdb/asterix-common/src/main/resources/asx_errormsg/en.properties
+++ b/asterixdb/asterix-common/src/main/resources/asx_errormsg/en.properties
@@ -165,6 +165,7 @@
 1089 = Field %1$s must be of type %2$s but found to be of type %3$s
 1090 = Field %1$s must be of an array of type %2$s but found to contain an 
item of type %3$s
 1092 = Parameter %1$s cannot be set
+1093 = A parser error has occurred. The detail exception: %1$s
 
 # Feed Errors
 3001 = Illegal state.

http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/asterixdb/blob/d906bd89/asterixdb/asterix-fuzzyjoin/src/main/java/org/apache/asterix/fuzzyjoin/similarity/SimilarityFilters.java
----------------------------------------------------------------------
diff --git 
a/asterixdb/asterix-fuzzyjoin/src/main/java/org/apache/asterix/fuzzyjoin/similarity/SimilarityFilters.java
 
b/asterixdb/asterix-fuzzyjoin/src/main/java/org/apache/asterix/fuzzyjoin/similarity/SimilarityFilters.java
index 4148568..022fa5d 100644
--- 
a/asterixdb/asterix-fuzzyjoin/src/main/java/org/apache/asterix/fuzzyjoin/similarity/SimilarityFilters.java
+++ 
b/asterixdb/asterix-fuzzyjoin/src/main/java/org/apache/asterix/fuzzyjoin/similarity/SimilarityFilters.java
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-/**
+/*
  * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
  * or more contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file
  * distributed with this work for additional information
@@ -16,30 +16,29 @@
  * specific language governing permissions and limitations
  * under the License.
  */
-
 package org.apache.asterix.fuzzyjoin.similarity;
 
 import java.io.Serializable;
 
 public interface SimilarityFilters extends Serializable {
-    public int getLengthLowerBound(int length);
+    int getLengthLowerBound(int length);
 
-    public int getLengthUpperBound(int length);
+    int getLengthUpperBound(int length);
 
-    public int getPrefixLength(int length);
+    int getPrefixLength(int length);
 
-    public boolean passLengthFilter(int lengthX, int lengthY);
+    boolean passLengthFilter(int lengthX, int lengthY);
 
-    public boolean passPositionFilter(int noGramsCommon, int positionX, int 
lengthX, int positionY, int lengthY);
+    boolean passPositionFilter(int noGramsCommon, int positionX, int lengthX, 
int positionY, int lengthY);
 
-    public float passSimilarityFilter(final int[] tokensX, int startX, int 
lengthX, final int prefixLengthX,
+    float passSimilarityFilter(final int[] tokensX, int startX, int lengthX, 
final int prefixLengthX,
             final int[] tokensY, int startY, int lengthY, final int 
prefixLengthY, final int intersectionSizePrefix);
 
-    public float passSimilarityFilter(final int[] tokensX, final int 
prefixLengthX, final int[] tokensY,
+    float passSimilarityFilter(final int[] tokensX, final int prefixLengthX, 
final int[] tokensY,
             final int prefixLengthY, final int intersectionSizePrefix);
 
-    public boolean passSuffixFilter(int[] tokensX, int startX, int lengthX, 
int positionX, int[] tokensY, int startY,
+    boolean passSuffixFilter(int[] tokensX, int startX, int lengthX, int 
positionX, int[] tokensY, int startY,
             int lengthY, int positionY);
 
-    public boolean passSuffixFilter(int[] tokensX, int positionX, int[] 
tokensY, int positionY);
+    boolean passSuffixFilter(int[] tokensX, int positionX, int[] tokensY, int 
positionY);
 }

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