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Component Metadata Infrastructure (CMDI): Component Metadata Specification [DRAFT]
Version 1.2 [Date]
- Component Metadata Infrastructure (CMDI): Component Metadata …
- Structure of CMDI files
- The CMDI Component Specification Language (CCSL)
- Transformation of CCSL into a CMD profile schema definition
- Appendices
- Bibliography
Introduction
Many researchers, from the humanities and other domains, have a strong need to study resources in close detail. Nowadays more and more of these resources are available online. To be able to find these resources, they are described with metadata. These metadata records are collected and made available via central catalogues. Often, resource providers want to include specific properties of a resource in their metadata to provide all relevant descriptions for a specific type of resource. The purpose of catalogues tends to be more generic and address a broader target audience. It is hard to strike the balance between these two ends of the spectrum with one metadata schema, and mismatches can negatively impact the quality of metadata provided. The goal of the Component Metadata Infrastructure (CMDI) is to provide a flexible mechanism to build resource specific metadata schemas out of shared components and semantics (Broeder et al, 2010 and 2012).
In CMDI the metadata lifecycle starts with the need of a metadata modeller to create a dedicated metadata profile for a specific type of resources. The modeller can browse and search a registry for components and profiles that are suitable or come close to meet her requirements. A component groups together metadata elements that belong together and can potentially be reused in a different context. Components can also group other components. A component registry, e.g. the CLARIN Component Registry, might already contain any number of components. These can be reused as they are or be adapted by modifying, adding or removing some metadata elements and/or components. Also completely new components can be created to model the unique aspects of the resources under consideration. All the needed components are combined into one profile specific for the type of resources. Components, elements and values in such a profile are linked to a semantic description - a concept - to make their meaning explicit (Durco et al, 2013). These semantic descriptions can be stored in a semantic registry, e.g. the CLARIN Concept Registry. In the end metadata creators can create records for specific resources that comply with the profile relevant for the resource type, and these records can be provided to local and global catalogues (Van Uytvanck et al, 2012).
History
CMDI has been developed in the context of the European CLARIN infrastructure with input from other initiatives and experts. Already in its preparatory phase, which started in 2007, the infrastructure felt the need for flexibility in the metadata domain as it was confronted with many types of resources that had to be accurately described. For version 1.0 the CMDI toolkit was created, consisting of the XML schemas and XSLT stylesheets to validate and transform components, profiles and records. Version 1.1 included some small changes and has seen small incremental backward compatible advances since 2011. This version has been in use all throughout CLARIN’s construction phase. Also CMDI has seen a growing number of tools and infrastructure systems that deal with its records and components and rely on its shared syntax and semantics. This specification describes version 1.2. This new version adds functionality and also fixes some issues. These changes are highlighted in CE-2014-0318. The transition from 1.1 to 1.2 is supported by version 1.2 of the CMDI toolkit.
Scope
The component metadata lifecycle needs a comprehensive infrastructure with systems that cooperate well together. To enable this level of cooperation this specification provides in depth descriptions and definitions of what CMDI records, components and their representations in XML look like.
The scope of this specification is to describe these XML representations, which enable the flexible construction of interoperable metadata schemas suitable for, but not limited to, describing language resources. The metadata schemas based on these representations can be used to describe resources at different levels of granularity (e.g. descriptions on the collection level or on the level of individual resources).
In ISO 24622-1:2015 the component metadata model has been standardized. The present specification is compliant with this ISO standard, and also extends and constraints it at various places (see also the red parts in the UML class diagram below):
- support for attributes on both components and elements is added,
- a profile is limited to one root component, and
- an element always belongs to a specific component.
Terminology
The keywords MUST
, MUST NOT
, REQUIRED
, SHALL
, SHALL NOT
, SHOULD
, SHOULD NOT
, RECOMMENDED
, MAY
, and OPTIONAL
in this document are to be interpreted as described in IETF RFC 2119.
Glossary
General
- CLARIN infrastructure, CLARIN
- The infrastructure governed by the CLARIN ERIC.
- concept
- An abstract idea conceived in the mind or generalised from particular instances (cf. Merriam-Webster, definition of concept).
- concept link
- A reference from a CMD profile, CMD component, CMD element, CMD attribute or a value in a controlled vocabulary to an entry in a semantic registry via a URI, typically a persistent identifier.
- concept registry
- A semantic registry maintaining concepts, e.g. the CLARIN Concept Registry as used in the CLARIN infrastructure.
- controlled vocabulary, closed/open vocabulary
- A set of values that can be used either to constrain the set of permissible values or to provide suggestions for applicable values in a given context.
- data category
- The result of the specification of a given data field (ISO 12620:2009).
- language tag
- A textual code “used to help identify languages, whether spoken, written, signed, or otherwise signaled, for the purpose of communication. This includes constructed and artificial languages but excludes languages not intended primarily for human communication, such as programming languages.” (IETF BCP 47)
- media type, MIME type
- A type which specifies the nature of the data as described in IETF RFC 6838.
- metadata
- A resource that is a description of another resource, usually given as a set of properties in the form of attribute-value pairs. This description may contain information about the resource, aspects or parts of the resource and/or artefacts and actors connected to the resource.
- persistent identifier, PID
- Unique Uniform Resource Identifier that assures permanent access for a resource by providing access to it independently of its physical location or current ownership.
- resource
- A, possibly digitally accessible, entity that can be described in terms of its content and technical properties, referenced by a Uniform Resource Identifier.
- semantic registry
- A directory of (authoritative) definitions of terms, concepts or data categories, or the system maintaining it. These registries should also provide persistent identifiers for their entries.
- term
- A verbal designation of a general concept in a specific subject field (ISO 1087-1:2000).
- Uniform Resource Identifier, URI
- An identifier for resources as described in IETF RFC 3986.
CMDI
- CCSL, CMDI Component Specification Language
- XML based language for describing components and profiles according to the CMD model.
- CMD attribute
- A unit of a CMD element that describes the level at which properties of a CMD element can be provided by means of value scheme constrained atomic values.
- CMD component, component
- A reusable, structured template for the description of (an aspect of) a resource, defined by means of a CMD specification document with the potential of including other CMD components, either through reference or inline definition.
- CMD component registry, component registry
- A service where CMD specifications can be registered and accessed.
- CMD element, element definition
- A unit of a CMD component that describes the level of the metadata instance that can carry atomic values constrained by a value scheme, and does not contain further levels except for that of the CMD attribute.
- CMD instance, metadata instance, CMDI file, metadata record, CMD record
- A file that conforms to the general CMDI instance structure as described in this specification, and at the instance payload level follows the specific structure defined by the CMD profile it relates to.
- CMD instance envelope
- The sections of a CMD instance which are structured uniformly for all instances, and contains the CMD instance header and the list of Resource proxies which may be referenced from the CMD instance payload section.
- CMD instance header
- The section of a metadata instance marked as ‘header’, providing information on that metadata instance as such, not the resource that is described by the metadata file.
- CMD instance payload
- The section of a metadata instance that follows the structure defined by the profile it references and contains the description of the resources to which that metadata instance relates.
- CMD model, Component Metadata model
- The component based metadata model described in the present specification.
- CMD profile, profile definition, profile
- A structured template for the description of a class of resources providing the complete structure for an instance payload by means of a hierarchy of CMD components.
- CMD profile schema
- A schema definition by which the correctness of a CMD instance with respect to the CMD profile it pertains to can be evaluated. May be expressed as XML Schema but also in other XML schema languages.
- CMD root component
- [TODO]
- CMD specification, component specification/definition, profile specification/definition
- The representation of a CMD component or CMD profile, expressed using the constructs of CCSL.
- CMD specification header, component header, profile header
- The section of a CMD specification marked as ‘header’, providing information on that specification as such that is not part of the defined structure.
- CMDI, Component Metadata Infrastructure
- Metadata description framework consisting of the CMD model and infrastructure to process instances of (parts of) the model.
- inline CMD component
- A CMD component that is created and stored within another component and cannot be addressed from other components.
- resource proxy, CMD resource reference
- A representation of a resource within a metadata instance containing a Uniform Resource Identifier as a reference to the resource itself and an indication of its nature.
- resource proxy reference
- A reference from any point within the instance payload to any of the resource proxies.
- value scheme
- A set of constraints governing the range of values allowed for a specific CMD element or CMD attribute in a metadata instance, expressed in terms of an XML schema datatype, controlled vocabulary, or regular expression.
XML
- foreign attribute
- An XML attribute defined in a namespace other than those declared in CMDI, to be included in CMD instances as additional information targeted to specific receivers or applications.
- namespace
- An XML namespace as described in W3C XML Namespaces.
- regular expression
- An expression that constrains the set of permissible values, as described in XML Schema Regular Expressions (W3C XSD Part 2: Datatypes, appendix F Regular expressions).
- XML
- Extensible Markup Language as described by W3C recommendation (W3C XML).
- XML attribute
- A property of an XML element as defined in W3C XML.
- XML attribute declaration
- A component in an XML Schema that constrains the structure and content of a specific XML attribute, in accordance with W3C XSD, section 3.2 Attribute Declarations.
- XML container element
- An XML element that has one or more XML elements as its descendants.
- XML document
- A well-formed document as defined in the W3C XML recommendation (W3C XML, definition of XML Document).
- XML element
- A constituent of an XML document as defined in W3C XML.
- XML element declaration
- A component in an XML Schema that constrains the structure and content of a specific XML element, in accordance with W3C XSD, section 3.3 Element Declarations.
- XML Schema
- A document that complies with the W3C XML Schema recommendation (W3C XSD).
- XML schema datatype
- A predefined set of permissible content within a section of an XML document as described in W3C XSD Part 2: Datatypes.
Normative References
- IETF BCP 47
- Tags for Identifying Languages, September 2009,
https://tools.ietf.org/rfc/bcp/bcp47.txt
- IETF RFC 2119
- Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels, March 1997,
https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt
- IETF RFC 3023
- XML Media Types, January 2001,
https://tools.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3023.txt
- IETF RFC 3986
- Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax, January 2005,
https://tools.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3986.txt
- IETF RFC 6838
- Media Type Specifications and Registration Procedures, January 2013,
https://tools.ietf.org/rfc/rfc6838.txt
- ISO 24622-1:2015
- Language resource management - Component metadata infrastructure (CMDI) - Part 1: The component metadata model, ISO, 1 February 2015,
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail.htm?csnumber=37336
- W3C XML
- Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition), T. Bray, J. Paoli, C. M. Sperberg-McQueen, E. Maler and F. Yergeau (eds.), W3C Recommendation 26 November 2008,
http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-xml-20081126/
- W3C XML Namespaces
- Namespaces in XML 1.0 (Third Edition), T. Bray, D. Hollander, A. Layman, R. Tobin and H. S. Thompson (eds.), W3C Recommendation 8 December 2009
http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/REC-xml-names-20091208/
- W3C XSD
- XML Schema Part 1: Structures (Second Edition), H. S. Thompson, D. Beech, M. Maloney and N. Mendelsohn (eds.), W3C Recommendation 28 October 2004,
http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xmlschema-1-20041028/
- W3C XSD Part 2: Datatypes
- XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes (Second Edition), P.V. Biron and A. Malhotra (eds.), W3C Recommendation 02 May 2001,
http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-xmlschema-2-20041028/
Typographic and XML Namespace conventions
The following typographic conventions for XML fragments will be used throughout this specification:
<Element>
An XML element with the generic identifier Element that is bound to a default XML namespace.<prefix:Element>
An XML element with the generic identifier Element that is bound to an XML namespace denoted by the prefix prefix.<prefix:{Element}>
An XML element with a contextually specified identifier that is bound to an XML namespace denoted by the prefix prefix.<prefix:{Element}>*
Any number of XML elements with contextually specified identifiers that are bound to an XML namespace denoted by the prefix prefix.@attr
An XML attribute with the name attr.@{attr}
An XML attribute with a contextually specified name.@{attr}*
Any number of XML attributes with contextually specified names.@prefix:attr
An XML attribute with the name attr that is bound to an XML namespaces denoted by the prefix prefix.string
The literal string must be used either as element content or attribute value.xs:{type}
The XML schema type with name type.
The following XML namespace names and prefixes are used throughout this specification. The column "Recommended Syntax" indicates which syntax variant SHOULD
be used by the toolkit and other creators of CMDI related documents.
Prefix | Namespace Name | Comment | Recommended Syntax |
---|---|---|---|
cmd | http://www.clarin.eu/cmd/1 | CMDI instance (general/envelope) | prefixed |
cmdp | http://www.clarin.eu/cmd/1/profiles/{profileId} | CMDI payload (profile specific) | prefixed |
cue | http://www.clarin.eu/cmd/cues/1 | Cues for tools | prefixed |
xs | http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema | XML Schema | prefixed |
Note: the inclusion of the major version number (i.e. 1) in the clarin.eu namespaces, but not the minor version number reflects the approach that across minor versions within a major version of the CMDI specification, the namespace is kept constant for compatibility reasons.
Structure of CMDI files
{TODO}: finish and embed UML diagram (working version, PDF snapshot)
(Caption): The structure of a CMDI file (CMD instance). Colour scheme: Green boxes represent elements that are potentially present in all CMDI files (the CMD instance envelope). Blue boxes represent elements defined by the CMD profile (the CMD instance payload). The diagram is meant for overview and illustration; full details to be found in the tables below.
A CMDI file contains the actual metadata of one specific resource (hereafter referred to as the described resource), and might also be referred to as a CMD record or CMD instance. All CMDI files have the same structure at the top level. At a lower level, parts of its structure are defined by the CMD profile upon which it is based.
The main structure
A CMDI file has the root element <cmd:CMD>
with one attribute and 4 sub-elements that appear in mandatory order as described in the following table:
Name | Value type | Occurrences | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
<cmd:CMD> | xs:complexType | The root element of the CMDI file. | ||
@CMDVersion | xs:String ("1.2") | 1 | Denotes the CMDI version on which this CMDI file is based. | |
<cmd:Header> | xs:complexType | 1 | Encapsulates core administrative data about the CMDI file. | |
<cmd:Resources> | xs:complexType | 1 | Includes 3 lists containing information about resource proxies and their interrelations. | |
<cmd:IsPartOfList> | xs:complexType | 0 or 1 | A list of <cmd:IsPartOf> elements, each referencing a larger external resource of which the described resource (as a whole) forms a part.
| |
<cmd:Components> | xs:complexType | 1 | This element contains the profile specific section of the CMDI file. Here the descriptive metadata of the resource are found. |
The first three elements (<cmd:Header>
, <cmd:Resources>
and <cmd:IsPartOfList>
) constitute the CMD instance envelope and reside in the cmd
namespace. The CMD instance payload is contained in the <cmd:Components>
element, which (profile specific) substructure exists in the profile-specific namespace (prefix cmdp
), possibly adorned with attributes in the cmd
namespace.
In addition to this, foreign attributes (XML attributes of other namespaces than those defined in the Typographic and XML Namespace conventions) MAY
occur anywhere in <cmd:Header>
, <cmd:Resources>
and <cmd:IsPartOfList>
elements and on the <cmd:Components>
element (but not on any of its children). These foreign namespaces SHOULD be ignored by tools unrelated to the party associated with the namespace and therefore MAY be removed during processing. The foreign namespace MUST be representative of the party that introduces the extension. Therefore, the namespace SHOULD NOT
start with http://www.clarin.eu
, http://clarin.eu
, etc. unless the foreign namespace is introduced by the owner of the domain clarin.eu.
A detailed specification of the above mentioned parts of a CMD instance is given in the next four sections.
Example 1 CMD instance envelope
This example shows the main structure of a CMD instance.
<cmd:CMD CMDVersion="1.2" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:cmd="http://www.clarin.eu/cmd/1" xmlns:cmdp="http://www.clarin.eu/cmd/1/profiles/clarin.eu:cr1:p_1311927752306" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.clarin.eu/cmd/1 http://www.clarin.eu/cmd/1/xsd/cmd-envelop.xsd http://www.clarin.eu/cmd/1/profiles/clarin.eu:cr1:p_1311927752306 https://catalog.clarin.eu/ds/ComponentRegistry/rest/registry/profiles/clarin.eu:cr1:p_1311927752306/1.2/xsd"> <cmd:Header> ... </cmd:Header> <cmd:Resources> <cmd:ResourceProxyList> ... </cmd:ResourceProxyList> <cmd:JournalFileProxyList> ... </cmd:JournalFileProxyList> <cmd:ResourceRelationList> ... </cmd:ResourceRelationList> </cmd:Resources> <cmd:IsPartOfList> ... </cmd:IsPartOfList> <cmd:Components> ... </cmd:Components> </cmd:CMD>
The <Header>
element
The header of a CMDI instance mainly contains administrative information about the metadata, that is metadata about the CMDI file itself. The included elements MUST follow the structure and order described in this table:
Name | Value type | Occurrences | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
<cmd:Header> | xs:complexType | Encapsulates core administrative data about the CMDI file. | ||
<cmd:MdCreator> | xs:string | 0 to unbounded | Denotes the creator of this metadata file. | |
<cmd:MdCreationDate> | xs:date | 0 or 1 | The date this metadata file was created. | |
<cmd:MdSelfLink> | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | A reference to this metadata file in its home repository, in the form of a PID (RECOMMENDED ) or a URL.
| |
<cmd:MdProfile> | xs:anyURI | 1 | The CMDI profile upon which this metadata file is based, given by its identifier in a Component Registry. | |
<cmd:MdCollectionDisplayName> | xs:string | 0 or 1 | The collection to which the described resource belongs, given as a human-readable name. Exploitation tools can use this name to present metadata collections. |
Example 2 Header with foreign attribute
This example shows the header of a CMD instance, including the use of a foreign attribute, i.e., containing the ORCID id of the creator.
<cmd:Header> <cmd:MdCreator orcid:id="http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5727-2427" xmlns:orcid="http://www.orcid.org/ns/orcid">John Doe</cmd:MdCreator> <cmd:MdCreationDate>2012-04-17</cmd:MdCreationDate> <cmd:MdSelfLink>hdl:1234/567890</cmd:MdSelfLink> <cmd:MdProfile>clarin.eu:cr1:p_1311927752306</cmd:MdProfile> <cmd:MdCollectionDisplayName>CLARIN-NL web services</cmd:MdCollectionDisplayName> </cmd:Header>
The <Resources>
element
This section of the CMDI file provides the sequence of
- files which are parts of or closely related to the described resource (
<cmd:ResourceProxyList>
and<cmd:JournalFileProxyList>
) - possible relations between pairs of these files (
<cmd:ResourceRelationList>
)
and MUST follow the structure and order described in this table:
Name | Value type | Occurrences | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
<cmd:Resources> | xs:complexType | Includes 3 lists containing information about resource proxies and their interrelations. | ||
<cmd:ResourceProxyList> | xs:complexType | 1 | A list of <cmd:ResourceProxy> elements, each referencing a file contained in or closely related to the described resource.
| |
<cmd:JournalFileProxyList> | xs:complexType | 1 | A list of <cmd:JournalFileProxy> elements, each referencing a file (“journal file”) containing provenance information about the described resource.
| |
<cmd:ResourceRelationList> | xs:complexType | 1 | A list of <cmd:ResourceRelation> elements, each representing a relationship between 2 resource files (as listed in the <cmd:ResourceProxyList> ).
|
The list of resource proxies
<cmd:ResourceProxyList>
contains a sequence of zero or more occurrences of <cmd:ResourceProxy>
, each representing a file/part of the described resource, and MUST follow the structure and order described in this table:
Name | Value type | Occurrences | Description | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
<cmd:ResourceProxyList> | xs:complexType | Contains a list of resource proxies (see below). | ||||
<cmd:ResourceProxy> | xs:complexType | 0 to unbounded | Represents a file which is a part of or closely related to the described resource. | |||
@id | xs:ID | 1 | Local identifier for the parent <cmd:ResourceProxy> , unique within this CMDI file.
| |||
<cmd:ResourceType> | xs:string ("Resource", "Metadata", "LandingPage", "SearchService", "SearchPage"; see below for a description of each of the possible values) | 1 | The type of the file represented by this <cmd:ResourceProxy> .
| |||
@mimetype | xs:string | 0 or 1 | The media type of the file. | |||
<cmd:ResourceRef> | xs:anyURI | 1 | A reference to the file represented by this <cmd:ResourceProxy> , in the form of a PID (RECOMMENDED ) or a URL.
|
Resource types
- Resource
- A resource that is described in the present CMD instance, e.g. a text document, media file or tool.
- Metadata
- A metadata resource, i.e. another CMD instance, that is subordinate to the present CMD instance. The media type of this metadata resource
SHOULD
beapplication/x-cmdi+xml
.
- A metadata resource, i.e. another CMD instance, that is subordinate to the present CMD instance. The media type of this metadata resource
- SearchPage
- Resource that is a web page that allows the described resource to be queried by an end-user.
- SearchService
- A resource that is a web service that allows the described resource to be queried by means of dedicated software.
- LandingPage
- A resources that is a web page that provides the original context of the described resource, e.g. a "deep link" into a repository system.
The list of journal files
<cmd:JournalFileProxyList>
contains a sequence of zero or more occurrences of <cmd:JournalFileProxy>
, each representing a file containing provenance information about the described resource, and MUST follow the structure and order described in this table:
Name | Value type | Occurrences | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
<cmd:JournalFileProxyList> | xs:complexType | Contains a list of journal file proxies (see below). | |||
<cmd:JournalFileProxy> | xs:complexType | 0 to unbounded | Represents a file containing provenance information about the described resource. | ||
<cmd:JournalFileRef> | xs:anyURI | 1 | A reference to the file represented by this <cmd:JournalFileProxy> , in the form of a PID (RECOMMENDED ) or a URL.
|
Notes
- The actual content and layout of the journal file is beyond the scope of this specification.
The list of relations between resource files
<cmd:ResourceRelationList>
contains a sequence of zero or more occurrences of <cmd:ResourceRelation>
, each representing a relation between any pair of <cmd:ResourceProxies>
, and MUST follow the structure and order described in this table:
If these parts are present they MUST
appear in this order:
Name | Value type | Occurrences | Description | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
<cmd:ResourceRelationList> | xs:complexType | Contains a list of resource relations (see below). | |||||
<cmd:ResourceRelation> | xs:complexType | 0 to unbounded | A representation of a relation between 2 resource proxies listed in <cmd:ResourceProxyList> .
| ||||
<cmd:RelationType> | xs:string | 1 | The type of the relation represented by its parent <cmd:ResourceRelation> .
| ||||
@ConceptLink | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | A reference to some concept registry (e.g. CLARIN Concept Registry), indicating the semantics of <cmd:RelationType> .
| ||||
<cmd:Resource> | xs:complexType | 2 | References one of the resource proxies participating in the relationship. | ||||
@ref | xs:IDREF | 1 | A reference to the <cmd:ResourceProxy> with id=ref (the <cmd:ResourceProxy> represented by its parent <cmd:Resource> element).
| ||||
<cmd:Role> | xs:string | 0 or 1 | Indicates the role its parent Resource plays in the relationship. | ||||
@ConceptLink | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | A reference to some concept registry (e.g. CLARIN Concept Registry), indicating the semantics of <cmd:Role> .
|
Example 3 Resources
This example shows a list of resources of various types.
<cmd:Resources> <cmd:ResourceProxyList> <cmd:ResourceProxy id="lp_0000000001"> <cmd:ResourceType mimetype="application/x-httpd-php">LandingPage</cmd:ResourceType> <cmd:ResourceRef>http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-1779-0000-0007-D919-0</cmd:ResourceRef> </cmd:ResourceProxy> <cmd:ResourceProxy id="sru_0000000001"> <cmd:ResourceType mimetype="application/sru+xml">SearchService</cmd:ResourceType> <cmd:ResourceRef>https://clarin.phonetik.uni-muenchen.de/BASSRU/</cmd:ResourceRef> </cmd:ResourceProxy> <cmd:ResourceProxy id="c_0000000001"> <cmd:ResourceType mimetype="application/x-cmdi+xml">Metadata</cmd:ResourceType> <cmd:ResourceRef>https://clarin.phonetik.uni-muenchen.de/BASRepository/Public/Corpora/ZIPTEL/0001.1.cmdi.xml</cmd:ResourceRef> </cmd:ResourceProxy> <cmd:ResourceProxy id="h0"> <cmd:ResourceType>Resource</cmd:ResourceType> <cmd:ResourceRef>hdl:1839/00-SERV-0000-0000-0009-D</cmd:ResourceRef> </cmd:ResourceProxy> <cmd:ResourceProxy id="h1"> <cmd:ResourceType mimetype="application/vnd.sun.wadl+xml">Resource</cmd:ResourceType> <cmd:ResourceRef>http://catalog.clarin.eu/adelheidws/wadl/main.wadl</cmd:ResourceRef> </cmd:ResourceProxy> </cmd:ResourceProxyList> <cmd:JournalFileProxyList/> <cmd:ResourceRelationList/> </cmd:Resources>
Example 4 A minimally specified relation between resource files
A minimally specified relation between resource files.
<cmd:ResourceRelation> <cmd:RelationType>duplicates</cmd:RelationType> <cmd:Resource ref="_395"> <cmd:Resource ref="_394"/> </cmd:ResourceRelation>
Example 5 A maximally specified relation between resource files
This example shows a semantically rich specification of a relationship between two resources, i.e., relation type and roles are annotated with concept references from various semantic registries.
<cmd:ResourceRelation> <cmd:RelationType ConceptLink="http://www.w3.org/ns/oa#describing">describing</RelationType> <cmd:Resource ref="rp1"> <cmd:Role ConceptLink="http://hdl.handle.net/11459/CCR_C-6024_88c0ac12-c24b-dd5a-d183-07e6dae25c52">source</cmd:Role> </cmd:Resource> <cmd:Resource ref="rp2"> <cmd:Role ConceptLink="http://hdl.handle.net/11459/CCR_C-">target</cmd:Role> <!--TODO: register in the CCR --> </cmd:Resource> </cmd:ResourceRelation>
The IsPartOf List
<cmd:IsPartOfList>
contains a sequence of zero or more occurrences of <cmd:IsPartOf>
, each representing an external resource of which the described resource constitutes a part, and MUST follow the structure and order described in this table:
Name | Value type | Occurrences | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
<cmd:IsPartOfList> | xs:complexType | Contains a list of <cmd:IsPartOf> (see below).
| ||
<cmd:IsPartOf> | xs:anyURI | 0 to unbounded | A reference to an external resource of which the described resource is a part, in the form of a PID (RECOMMENDED ) or a URL.
|
Notes
- The inverse of the IsPartOf
MAY
be indicated by a resource proxy with resource type Metadata in the instance that describes the composite.
Example 6 The IsPartOf List
<cmd:IsPartOfList> <cmd:IsPartOf>hdl:11858/00-1779-0000-0006-BF00-E@format=cmdi</cmd:IsPartOf> </cmd:IsPartOfList>
The components
This section of the CMDI file forms what may be referred to as descriptive metadata about the described resource.
The CMD Profile referenced by the XML element <cmd:MdProfile>
in <cmd:Header>
defines what XML elements and XML attributes are mandatory or optional in this section. Some attributes MAY
appear universally in XML elements contained in any CMD instance payload section regardless of the profile, but rather depending on the corresponding level in the matching CMD Profile, i.e. whether the XML element is reflecting a CMD Component or CMD element. The next table describes the mandatory structure and order of this section as a function of the definition of a specific CMD Profile:
Name | Value type | Occurrences | Description | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
<cmd:Components> | xs:complexType | Container for the CMD instance payload. | ||||
<cmdp:{RootComponent}> | xs:complexType | 1 | The XML element housing all the metadata about the described resource, complying with the CMD profile schema identified in the <cmd:MdProfile> element in the CMD instance header.
| |||
@cmd:ref | xs:IDREF | 0 or 1 | Reference to a <cmd:ResourceProxy> with id=ref, to which this substructure specifically applies.
| |||
@{CMDAttribute}* | As specified in the CMD profile | As specified in the CMD profile | Custom attribute, defined as an allowed or mandatory child in a component specification. | |||
<cmdp:{CMDElement}>* | As specified in the CMD profile | As specified in the CMD profile | Atomic piece of information about the described resource. | |||
@xml:lang | xs:language | 0 or 1 | Indicates the language of the <cmdp:{CMDElement}> content by a language tag.
| |||
@cmd:ValueConceptLink | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | Reference to a concept in an external vocabulary. Used in case the value <cmdp:{CMDElement}> is selected from a controlled vocabulary.
| |||
@{CMDAttribute}* | As specified in the CMD profile | As specified in the CMD profile | Custom attribute, defined as an allowed or mandatory child in a CMD element specification. | |||
<cmdp:{CMDComponent}>* | xs:complexType | As specified in the CMD profile | A chunk of information about the described resource, composed of CMD Elements and other CMD Components. | |||
@cmd:ComponentId | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | Identifier of the CMD specification of <cmdp:{CMDComponent}> in a CMD Component Registry.
| |||
@cmd:ref | xs:IDREF | 0 or 1 | Reference to a <cmd:ResourceProxy> with @id equal to the value if this attribute, to which this substructure specifically applies.
| |||
@{CMDAttribute}* | As specified in the CMD profile | As specified in the CMD profile | Custom attribute, defined as an allowed or mandatory child in a CMD component specification. | |||
<cmdp:{CMDElement}>* | As specified in the CMD profile | As specified in the CMD profile | Atomic piece of information related to the described resource and forming a part of its parent CMD component. | |||
<cmdp:{CMDComponent}>* | xs:complexType | As specified in the CMD profile | A chunk of information related to the described resource, forming a part of its parent CMD component and further composed of CMD Elements and other CMD Components. |
Example 7 CMD instance payload
This example shows various (optional) aspects of the payload of an CMD instance: the use of language tags (@xml:lang
) for multilingual elements (cmdp:description
), identifiers of the specification of the instantiated components (@cmd:ComponentId
), references to an item from a vocabulary (@cmd:ValueConceptLink
), and components, elements and attributes defined in a CMD profile (cmdp:*
and @*
).
<cmd:Components> <cmdp:ToolService> ... <cmdp:GeneralInfo> <cmdp:Name>Adelheid</cmdp:Name> <cmdp:Description> <cmdp:Description xml:lang="en">A web-application with which an end user can have historical Dutch text tokenized, lemmatized and part-of-speech tagged, using the most appropriate resources (such as lexica) for the text in question.</cmdp:Description> </cmdp:Description> <cmdp:Description xml:lang="nl">Een webapplicatie waarmee een eindgebruiker teksten in oud nederlands kan laten tokeniseren, lemmatiseren en ontleden, gebruikmakend van de resources (zoals lexica) die het beste bij die tekst passen.</cmdp:Description> </cmdp:GeneralInfo> ... <cmdp:Contact cmd:ComponentId="clarin.eu:cr1:c_1271859438113"> <cmdp:Person>Drs. D. Broeder</cmdp:Person> <cmdp:Address>Wundtlaan 1, 6525 XD Nijmegen, The Netherlands</cmdp:Address> <cmdp:Email>Daan.Broeder@mpi.nl</cmdp:Email> <cmdp:Organisation cmd:ValueConceptLink="http://openskos.meertens.knaw.nl/Organisations/8c778a30-f607-45fd-838d-1ea00cea9150">Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics (MPI)</cmdp:Organisation> <cmdp:Telephone Type="work">+31 - 00 - 1234567</cmdp:Telephone> </cmdp:Contact> ... <cmdp:Tool CoreVersion="1.0" cmd:ref="h0"> <cmdp:toolInput> <cmdp:data> <cmdp:MimeType>text/xml</cmdp:MimeType> <cmdp:characterEncoding>UTF-8</cmdp:characterEncoding> <cmdp:datatype>ATL XML</cmdp:datatype> </cmdp:data> </cmdp:toolInput> ... </cmdp:Tool> </cmdp:ToolService> </cmd:Components>
The CMDI Component Specification Language (CCSL)
The CMDI Component Specification Language (CCSL) is used to describe a CMD component or CMD profile. Hence, a CCSL document provides the structure for describing an aspect of a resource or (in the case of a profile specification) the complete payload structure of the CMD instance. It is also basis for the generation of the XML schema file that is used to validate a CMD instance (see section Transformation of CCSL into a CMD schema definition for details).
{TODO} Finish diagram. Source: https://clarineric.slack.com/files/seaton/F1FQZDM39/ccslstructure_4.png
A CCSL document MUST
contain a CCSL header and the actual CMD component description. Its root element MUST
contain an XML attribute @isProfile
to indicate if the document specifies a CMD profile or a CMD component and it MUST
contain an XML attribute @CMDVersion
specifying the CMDI version ("1.2"). The root element MAY
also contain an XML attribute @CMDOriginalVersion
specifying the CMDI version that was originally used to create the component.
The following table describes the root element and its direct descendants. The described structure and order MUST
be followed.
Name | Valuetype | Occurrences | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
<ComponentSpec> | xs:complexType | Root element of the CCSL document. | ||
@isProfile | xs:boolean | 1 | Indication about the specification’s status as a CMD profile definition. | |
@CMDVersion | xs:string ( "1.2") | 1 | CMDI version of this CMD specification. | |
@CMDOriginalVersion | xs:string ( "1.1", "1.2") | 0 or 1 | CMDI version in which the CMD specification was created (default: 1.2). | |
<Header> | xs:complexType | 1 | Header of the CMD specification. | |
<Component> | xs:complexType | 1 | Definition of a component's structure (the root component in case of a profile specification). |
Example 8 CCSL document
This example shows the main structure of a CCSL document.
<ComponentSpec isProfile="true" CMDVersion="1.2" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:cue="http://www.clarin.eu/cmdi/cues/1" xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="https://infra.clarin.eu/CMDI/1.x/xsd/cmd-component.xsd"> <Header> ... </Header> <Component CardinalityMax="1" CardinalityMin="1" name="ToolService"> ... </Component> </ComponentSpec>
CCSL header
The CCSL header provides information relevant to identify and describe the component. This part includes a persistent identifier, the name, the description of the component and information about the status of the specification. The header MUST
contain an element indicating the component's status in its lifecycle (using the three lifecycles development, production, or deprecated) and MAY
contain the element <StatusComment>
to contain information about the reason for the current status. In the case of a deprecated specification that was succeeded by a new specification, the identifier of the direct successor MAY
be stored in the element <Successor>
.
The following table describes the header element and its direct descendants. The described structure and order MUST
be followed.
Name | Valuetype | Occurrences | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
<Header> | xs:complexType | Descriptive information about the component. | ||
<ID> | xs:anyURI | 1 | ID of the component specification. | |
<Name> | xs:string | 1 | Name of the component. | |
<Description> | xs:string | 0 or 1 | Description of the component. | |
<Status> | xs:string ("development", "production", "deprecated"; see below for a description of each of the possible values) | 1 | Status in lifecycle. | |
<StatusComment> | xs:string | 0 or 1 | Comment about the status. | |
<Successor> | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | ID of successor component, if available. | |
<DerivedFrom> | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | ID of component from which this component is derived, if available. |
Status values
- development
- The component specification is under construction, i.e. can undergo change at any moment, and therefore only to be used for testing purposes.
- production
- The component specification is stable and will not be changed anymore, i.e. can be used for production-level metadata instances.
- deprecated
- Usage of this component specification is discouraged, and usage of a successor component specification, if present, is encouraged.
Additional constraints
- A successor
SHOULD
only be present if the status of the CMD component is deprecated.
Example 9 CCSL header
This example shows the header of a CCSL document.
<Header> <ID>clarin.eu:cr1:p_1311927752306</ID> <Name>ToolService</Name> <Description>Description of a tool and/or service(s)</Description> <Status>production</Status> </Header>
Example 10 CCSL header for deprecated profile with successor
This example shows the header of a CCSL document for a deprecated profile with also a reference to its successor.
<Header> <ID>clarin.eu:cr1:p_1311927752306</ID> <Name>ToolService</Name> <Description>Description of a tool and/or service(s)</Description> <Status>deprecated</Status> <Successor>clarin.eu:cr1:p_1234567890</Successor> </Header>
CMD component definition
Components are defined as a sequence of elements which MAY
be followed by other components. The latter is allowed because components may be included in other components, either by referencing already defined components (i.e. a CMD component with its own identifier) or providing an inline component definition. The former MUST
be done by assigning the identifier of the referenced component as the value of @ComponentRef
.
The following table describes the element for defining CMD components and its direct descendants. The described structure and order MUST
be followed.
Name | Valuetype | Occurrences | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
<Component> | xs:complexType | Root element of every CMD component definition. | |||
@name | xs:NCName | 0 or 1 | Name of the component. | ||
@ComponentRef | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | Reference to an existing component specification with <ID> equal to the value of this attribute.
| ||
@ConceptLink | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | Concept link. | ||
@CardinalityMin | xs:nonNegativeInteger | 0 or 1 | Minimum number of times this component has to occur (default: 1). | ||
@CardinalityMax | xs:nonNegativeInteger or "unbounded" | 0 or 1 | Maximum number of times this component may occur (default: 1). | ||
<Documentation> | xs:string | 0 to unbounded | Documentation about the purpose of the component. | ||
@xml:lang | xs:language | 0 or 1 | The language-tag of the language used by the documentation. | ||
<AttributeList> | xs:complexType | 0 or 1 | Additional attributes specified by the component creator. | ||
<Attribute> | xs:complexType | 1 to unbounded | An additional attribute. | ||
<Element> | xs:complexType | 0 to unbounded | The elements of this component. | ||
<Component> | xs:complexType | 0 to unbounded | The components nested in this component. |
Additional constraints
- A CMD component
MUST
have either a name or a reference to an existing component. - An inline CMD component
SHOULD
contain at least one CMD element or CMD component. - For the CMD component that is the direct descendant of
<ComponentSpec>
, the minimum and maximum cardinalitiesMUST
both be 1. - The value of the minimum cardinality
MUST
be lower or equal to the value of the maximum cardinality. - For this CMD component, each documentation
MUST
have a unique@xml:lang
value. And thereMUST
not be more than one documentation with an empty or missing@xml:lang
. - Within the attribute list each CMD attribute
MUST
have a unique name. - The CMD elements and CMD components, which are direct descendants of this component,
MUST
all have different names. - A CMD component
MUST NOT
to be a descendant of itself.
Example 11 CMD component definition
This example shows a definition for a CMD component including documentation in two languages.
<Component ComponentId="clarin.eu:cr1:c_1320657629631" name="Service" ConceptLink="http://hdl.handle.net/11459/CCR_C-4159_ca0e6cba-cab5-b51a-f430-fdcb0756c9ac" CardinalityMin="0" CardinalityMax="unbounded"> <Documentation xml:lang="en">A web service which is described in enough detail to enable automatic invocation for machine interaction.</Documentation> <Documentation xml:lang="nl">Een webservice, gedetailleerd genoeg beschreven om het mogelijk te maken de service automatisch aan te laten roepen voor machine-interactie.</Documentation> <AttributeList> ... </AttributeList> ... </Component>
CMD element definition
CMD elements are a template for storing atomic values constrained by a value scheme in a CMD instance. The CCSL specification of an CMD element MUST
contain the name of the element and MAY
contain a concept link, the value schema, and information about the allowed cardinality of the element. Furthermore, it MAY
be indicated if the element allows for values in more than one language, in which case an unlimited upper cardinality bound is implied. A CMD element MUST
either have one of the standard XML schema datatypes assigned to it, or be constrained by using regular expressions or vocabularies. The latter can be specified by giving the complete list of allowed values or by stating the URI of an external vocabulary (for details see Value restrictions for elements and attributes). If the instance's content of the element can be derived from other values, the element AutoValue
MAY
be used to give indication about the derivation function. The CCSL does not prescribe or suggest a specific set of derivation functions.
The following table describes the element for defining CMD elements and its direct descendants. The described structure and order MUST
be followed.
Name | Valuetype | Occurrences | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
<Element> | xs:complexType | Root element of every CMD element definition. | |||
@name | xs:NCName | 1 | Name of the element. | ||
@ConceptLink | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | Concept link. | ||
@ValueScheme | xs:string (name of an XML Schema datatype) | 0 or 1 | Allowed data type (default: string ).
| ||
@CardinalityMin | xs:nonNegativeInteger or unbounded | 0 or 1 | Minimum number of times this element has to occur (default: 1). | ||
@CardinalityMax | xs:nonNegativeInteger or unbounded | 0 or 1 | Maximum number of times this element may occur (default: 1). | ||
@Multilingual | xs:boolean | 0 or 1 | Indication that the element can have values in multiple languages (default: false). | ||
<Documentation> | xs:string | 0 to unbounded | Documentation about the purpose of the element. | ||
@xml:lang | xs:language | 0 or 1 | The language-tag of the language used by the documentation. | ||
<AttributeList> | xs:complexType | 0 or 1 | Additional attributes specified by the component creator. | ||
<Attribute> | xs:complexType | 1 to unbounded | An additional attribute. | ||
<ValueScheme> | xs:complexType | 0 or 1 | Value restrictions based on a regular expression or a specified vocabulary. See Value restrictions for elements and attributes for details. | ||
<AutoValue> | xs:string | 0 to unbounded | Derivation rules for the element's content. |
Additional constraints
- For the defined CMD element, each documentation
MUST
have a unique@xml:lang
value. And thereMUST
not be more than one documentation with an empty or missing@xml:lang
. - A CMD element
SHOULD
have either a@ValueScheme
or a<ValueScheme>
. - The value of the minimum cardinality
MUST
be lower or equal to the value of the maximum cardinality. - Within the attribute list each CMD attribute
MUST
have a unique name.
Notes
- If multilingual has the value
true
and@ValueScheme
has the valuestring
, the value of@CardinalityMax
MUST
be ignored and defaults to unbounded. - If
@ValueScheme
has not the valuestring
the value of multilingualMUST
be ignored. - If the CMD element has a
<ValueScheme>
the data type defaults tostring
.
Example 12 CMD element definition
This example shows the definition of a CMD element.
<Element name="Name" ConceptLink="http://hdl.handle.net/11459/CCR_C-4160_192be757-0d8f-f4fe-b10b-d3d50de92482" CardinalityMin="1" CardinalityMax="1" ValueScheme="string" Multilingual="false"> <Documentation>The name of the web service or set of web services.</Documentation> </Element>
Example 13 CMD element definition with auto value
This example shows the definition of a CMD element with an (informative) auto value derivation rule, i.e., instantiate the element with the date and time at the moment of creation.
<Element name="CreationDate" ValueScheme="dateTime"> <!-- ‘now’ is an informative example of an derivation function --> <AutoValue>now</AutoValue> </Element>
CMD attribute definition
Both the CMD element and component description allow the specification of additional CMD attributes. Every CMD attribute definition MUST
contain a @name
attribute and MAY
contain other attributes or elements for a more detailed description.
The following table describes the element for defining CMD attributes and its direct descendants. The described structure and order MUST
be followed.
Name | Valuetype | Occurrences | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
<Attribute> | xs:complexType | Root element of every CMD attribute definition. | |||
@name | xs:NCName | 1 | Name of the attribute. | ||
@ConceptLink | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | Concept link. | ||
@ValueScheme | xs:string (name of an XML Schema datatype) | 0 or 1 | Allowed data type (default: string). | ||
@Required | xs:boolean | 0 or 1 | Indication if attribute is required (default: false). | ||
<Documentation> | xs:string | 0 to unbounded | Documentation about the purpose of the attribute. | ||
@xml:lang | xs:language | 0 or 1 | The language-tag of the language used by the documentation. | ||
<ValueScheme> | xs:complexType | 0 or 1 | Value restrictions based on a regular expression or a specified vocabulary. See Value restrictions for elements and attributes for details. | ||
<AutoValue> | xs:string | 0 to unbounded | Derivation rules for the attribute's content. |
Additional constraints
- For the defined CMD attribute, each documentation
MUST
have a unique@xml:lang
value. And thereMUST
not be more than one documentation with an empty or missing@xml:lang
. - A CMD attribute
SHOULD
have either a@ValueScheme
or a<ValueScheme>
.
Notes
- If the CMD attribute has a
<ValueScheme>
, the data type defaults to string.
Example 14 CMD attribute definition
This example shows a definition of a CMD attribute.
<Attribute name="CoreVersion" ConceptLink="http://hdl.handle.net/11459/CCR_C-2547_7883d382-b3ce-8ab4-7052-0138525a8ba1" Required="true"> <ValueScheme> ... </ValueScheme> </Attribute>
Value restrictions for elements and attributes
Apart from standard XML schema datatypes the content of a CMD element or attribute instance can be restricted by two means. The <ValueScheme>
element MAY
contain either an XML element <pattern>
with the specification of a regular expression the element/attribute should comply with, or the definition of a controlled vocabulary of allowed values. CMDI 1.2 supports two approaches to describe such a vocabulary:
- specifying all allowed values with
OPTIONAL
attributes for every value to include a concept link and a description of the specific value, or - referring to an external vocabulary via a URI specified in
@URI
. TheOPTIONAL
XML attributes@ValueProperty
and@ValueLanguage
MAY
be used to give more information about preferred label and language in the chosen vocabulary.
The order and structure described in the following table MUST
be followed when specifying value restrictions:
Name | Valuetype | Occurrences | Description | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
<ValueScheme> | xs:complexType | Specification of the value scheme of an element or attribute. | |||||
<pattern> | xs:string | 0 or 1 | Specification of a regular expression the element/attribute should comply with. | ||||
<Vocabulary> | xs:complexType | 0 or 1 | Specification of a CMD vocabulary. | ||||
@URI | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | URI of an external vocabulary. | ||||
@ValueProperty | xs:string | 0 or 1 | preferred label in the external vocabulary. | ||||
@ValueLanguage | xs:language | 0 or 1 | preferred language in the external vocabulary. | ||||
<enumeration> | xs:complexType | 0 or 1 | Enumeration of items from a controlled vocabulary. | ||||
<appinfo> | xs:string | 0 to 1 | End-user guidance about the value of the controlled vocabulary as a whole. | ||||
<item> | xs:string | 1 to unbounded | An item from a controlled vocabulary. | ||||
@ConceptLink | xs:anyURI | 0 or 1 | Concept link of item value. | ||||
@AppInfo | xs:string | 0 or 1 | End-user guidance about the value of this controlled vocabulary item. |
Additional constraints
- In an enumeration, each item value
MUST
be unique. - A
<ValueScheme>
must have either a<pattern>
, or a<Vocabulary>
with a non-empty<enumeration>
, or a@URI
.
Notes
- A vocabulary with a non-empty enumeration of permissible values provides a closed vocabulary. Using
@URI
, an external vocabulary provided by a vocabulary service, e.g. the CLARIN vocabulary service CLAVAS, can be associated with the closed vocabulary, which allows tools to use the service’s facilities to find a value. - The
@URI
can also be used for an open vocabulary where the facilities of the vocabulary service can be used to find suggestions for an applicable value.
Example 15 Value restriction with enumeration
This example shows a value restriction with a reference to an external vocabulary and an embedded enumeration, i.e., a closed vocabulary.
<ValueScheme> <Vocabulary URI="http://openskos.meertens.knaw.nl/iso-639-3" ValueProperty="skos:notation"> <enumeration> <item AppInfo="Ghotuo (aaa)" ConceptLink="http://cdb.iso.org/lg/CDB-00132443-001">aaa</item> <item AppInfo="Alumu-Tesu (aab)" ConceptLink="http://cdb.iso.org/lg/CDB-00133770-001">aab</item> <item AppInfo="Ari (aac)" ConceptLink="http://cdb.iso.org/lg/CDB-00133769-001">aac</item> <item AppInfo="Amal (aad)" ConceptLink="http://cdb.iso.org/lg/CDB-00133768-001">aad</item> <item AppInfo="Arbëreshë Albanian (aae)" ConceptLink="http://cdb.iso.org/lg/CDB-00133767-001">aae</item> <item AppInfo="Aranadan (aaf)" ConceptLink="http://cdb.iso.org/lg/CDB-00133766-001">aaf</item> ... </enumeration> </Vocabulary> </ValueScheme>
Example 16 Value restriction with pattern
This example shows a value restriction with a regular expression.
<ValueScheme> <pattern>((\\p{L}|\\p{N}|\\p{P}|\\p{S})+|\\s)+</pattern> </ValueScheme>
Cue attributes
CMDI profiles provide the blueprint for a logical structuring of metadata instances. However, they provide very little explicit information about how the information contained in CMDI instances should be presented. Such information can be processed by viewers, editors and catalogues alike, leading to a potentially more uniform (across applications), visually pleasing and user friendly presentation of metadata. The usage of display information SHOULD always be optional for applications processing CMDI instances.
For this purpose, all CMD attribute, element, and component specifications MAY contain additional attributes in the cue namespace. These MAY be used to give information about how the payload contained in the respective part of the CMD instance should be presented. Cues are grouped in component specific styles. Different styles for the same CMD component MAY be developed. The CCSL does not prescribe or suggest a specific set of cue attributes.
Examples of aspects for which display cues may be introduced are display order, structural transformation (e.g. folding of hierarchies), labeling and visual styling.
Example 17 Cue for CMD element
This example shows a cue for a CMD element, i.e., its display priority within its component and a label which can be used when multiple instantiations are shown together.
<Element name="Name" ... cue:DisplayPriority="1" cue:PluralLabel="Names" > ... </Element>
Example 18 Cue for CMD component
<Component name="Person" cue:LabelElement="Name,Initials,Id "> <Element name="Name" CardinalityMin ="0" /> <Element name="Initials" CardinalityMin ="0" /> <Element name="Id" CardinalityMin ="0" /> <Component name="Address" CardinalityMin ="0" CardinalityMax ="1" cue:DisplayInline="true "> <Element name="Street" /> <Element name="Place" /> <Element name="Country" /> </Component> </Component>
{TODO} Caption should explain the envisioned behaviour of the different cues but also make clear that they are hypothetical
Transformation of CCSL into a CMD profile schema definition
A CMD instance document that is serialised as XML according to this specification SHOULD
contain a reference to the location of a CMD profile schema. The infrastructure MUST
provide a mechanism to derive such a schema for any specific CMD profile on basis of its definition and that of the CMD components that it references. This section specifies how different aspects of a CMD specification should be transformed into elements of a schema definition. The primary schema language targeted is XML Schema, although the infrastructure MAY
provide support for other schema languages, such as Relax NG (ISO/IEC 19757-2:2003). A CMD profile schema MUST
be derived from a CMD profile specification.
General properties of the CMD profile schema definition
A CMD profile schema MUST
allow for the evaluation of a CMD instance on all levels of description defined in one specific CMD profile. The schema MUST
require the presence of a CMD instance envelope as described in section Structure of CMDI files. The value of the <cmd:MdProfile>
header item in the CMD instance envelope SHOULD
only be valid if it is equal to the profile id as specified in the associated CMD profile.
The CMD profile schema SHOULD
include, as a matter of annotation, a copy of (a subset of) the information contained in the Header
section of the CMD profile from which it is derived.
The transformation MAY
make use of component references in the CMD component definition to derive (complex) types that can be reused throughout the schema definition.
The schema MUST
declare a profile specific payload namespace in addition to the fixed, global namespaces that are used (in particular cmd
and cue
). This namespace, with RECOMMENDED
prefix cmdp
, MUST
have the following format: http://www.clarin.eu/cmd/1/profiles/{profileId}
, where {profileId}
refers to the identifier of the profile from which the schema is derived in a Component Registry. All XML elements and XML attributes derived from CMD components, CMD elements MUST
be qualified and declared in this namespace. XML attributes derived from CMD attributes follow the convention that unprefixed attributes belong to their elements, which do belong to the profile specific payload namespace.
Interpretation of CMD component definitions in the CCSL
CMD Components which are represented as <Component>
XML elements in the CCSL, MUST
be realised as XML element declarations with the following property mapping:
Property | XML schema attribute | Derived from | Use |
---|---|---|---|
Name of the XML element | @name | @name | REQUIRED
|
Minimal number of occurrences | @minOccurs | @CardinalityMin , or '1' if XML attribute not present | REQUIRED 1
|
Maximal number of occurrences | @maxOccurs | @CardinalityMax , or '1' if XML attribute not present | REQUIRED 1
|
Concept link | @cmd:ConceptLink | @ConceptLink | OPTIONAL
|
Component id | @cmd:ComponentId | @ComponentId | OPTIONAL
|
1The implementation may make use of default evaluation of the schema language if it matches these requirements, as is the case with XML Schema, and therefore omit explicit declaration of these properties.
An optional XML Attribute @cmd:ref
of type xs:IDREF MUST
be allowed on the XML container element derived from any CMD component.
<Documentation>
XML elements contained in CMD Components SHOULD
be transformed into documentation elements embedded in the XML element declaration. In these, the content language information contained in the @xml:lang
XML attribute SHOULD
be preserved.
XML attributes of CMD Components in the cue
namespace SHOULD
be copied into the XML element declaration, in which case the XML attribute name, namespace and value SHOULD
be preserved.
Document structure prescribed by the schema
The first CMD component defined in the CMD profile (the "root component") MUST
be mapped as the mandatory, only child element of the <Components>
XML element of the CMD instance envelope. CMD components that are defined as direct descendants of another CMD component MUST
be mapped as direct descendants of the XML element declaration to which it is transformed. XML components at the CMD component level in the metadata instance MUST
be required to be included in the same order as defined in the CMD specification, the first of the resulting XML elements appearing after the last XML element derived from a CMD element at the same level, if present. These descendant CMD Components MUST
also be mapped to XML element declarations recursively as described in this specification.
CMD elements MUST
be mapped as direct descendants of the XML element declaration derived from the CMD component of which they are direct descendants, and MUST
be required to be included in the same order as defined in the CMD specification.
CMD attributes that are defined in the CCSL within <Attribute>
XML elements within an <AttributeList>
XML element that is a direct descendant of a CMD Component MUST
be mapped to XML attribute definitions on the XML container element to which this CMD Component is transformed.
Interpretation of CMD element definitions in the CCSL
CMD elements, represented as <Element>
XML elements in the CCSL, MUST
be realised as XML element declarations with the following property mapping:
Property | XML schema attribute | Derived from | Use |
---|---|---|---|
Name of the XML element | @name | @name | REQUIRED
|
Minimal number of occurrences | @minOccurs | @CardinalityMin unless @Multilingual is true,in which case MUST be 'unbounded', or '1' if neither XML attribute is present | REQUIRED 1
|
Maximal number of occurrences | @maxOccurs | @CardinalityMax , or '1' if XML attribute not present | REQUIRED 1
|
Type of the XML element | @type | See section Content model for CMD elements and CMD attributes in the schema definition | |
Concept link | @cmd:ConceptLink | @ConceptLink | OPTIONAL
|
Auto value instruction | @cmd:AutoValue | @AutoValue | OPTIONAL
|
1The implementation may make use of default evaluation of the schema language if it matches these requirements, as is the case with XML Schema, and therefore omit explicit declaration of these properties.
<Documentation>
XML elements contained in CMD elements SHOULD
be transformed into documentation elements embedded in the XML element declaration In these, the content language information contained in the @xml:lang
XML attribute SHOULD
be preserved.
XML attributes of CMD elements in the 'cue' namespace SHOULD
be copied into the XML element declaration, in which case the XML attribute name, namespace and value SHOULD
be preserved.
An optional XML attribute @cmd:ValueConceptLink
of type xs:anyURI MUST
be allowed on the XML element derived from a CMD element that has a vocabulary with XML attribute @URI
defined (see section Content model for CMD elements and CMD attributes in the schema definition).
The derivation of a content model for the XML element declaration on basis of a CMD element is described below.
Interpretation of CMD attribute definitions in the CCSL
CMD attributes, represented as <Attribute>
XML elements in the CCSL, MUST
be realised as XML attribute declarations with the following property mapping:
Property | XML schema attribute | Derived from | Use |
---|---|---|---|
Name of the XML element | @name | @name | REQUIRED
|
Use of the XML attribute | @use | 'required' if and only if @Required is present and equals true, otherwise 'optional' | REQUIRED 1
|
Type of the XML attribute | @type | See section Content model for CMD elements and CMD attributes in the schema definition | |
Concept link | @cmd:ConceptLink | @ConceptLink | OPTIONAL
|
Auto value instruction | @cmd:AutoValue | @AutoValue | OPTIONAL
|
1The implementation may make use of default evaluation of the schema language if it matches these requirements, as is the case with XML Schema, and therefore omit explicit declaration of these properties.
<Documentation>
XML elements contained in CMD attributes SHOULD
be transformed into documentation elements embedded in the XML attribute declaration. In these, the content language information contained in the @xml:lang
XML attribute SHOULD
be preserved.
XML attributes of CMD attributes in the cue
namespace SHOULD
be copied into the XML attribute declaration, in which case the XML attribute name, namespace and value SHOULD
be preserved.
The derivation of a content model for the XML attribute declaration on basis of a CMD attribute is described below.
Content model for CMD elements and CMD attributes in the schema definition
If a CMD element or CMD attribute in the CCSL has a @ValueScheme
XML attribute, its value MUST
be interpreted as the name of the XML Schema datatype (declared in the @type
attribute of the XML element or attribute declaration in XML Schema) that defines the allowed value range of the XML element/attribute derived from the CMD element/attribute.
Otherwise, if a CMD element or CMD attribute in the CCSL has a descendant XML element <ValueScheme>
that contains an XML element <pattern>
, then its text value MUST
be interpreted as the XML Schema Regular Expressions that defines the allowed value range of the XML element/attribute derived from this CMD element/attribute.
Otherwise, if a CMD element or CMD attribute in the CCSL has a descendant XML element <ValueScheme>
that contains an XML element <Vocabulary>
:
- The XML attribute
@URI
of the XML element<Vocabulary>
, if present,SHOULD
be transformed into an attributecmd:Vocabulary
of the same value on the XML element or attribute declaration in the schema. The XML element declaration should always allow a@cmd:ValueConceptLink
to retain a link to a specific vocabulary entry. - The XML attributes
@ValueProperty
and@ValueLanguage
of the XML element<Vocabulary>
SHOULD
be transformed into XML attributes in thecmd
namespace on the XML element declaration in the case of a CMD element or XML attribute declaration in the case of a CMD attribute. - The XML elements
<item>
that are descendants of<enumeration>
contained in<Vocabulary>
MUST
be transformed into an enumeration based restriction with values taken from the text content of the<item>
XML elements. Each enumeration item in the schemaSHOULD
be annotated: the value from the XML attribute@ConceptLink
by means of an XML attribute@cmd:ConceptLink
, and the value of the XML attribute@AppInfo
by means of an attribute@cmd:label
.
Notes
@cmd:Vocabulary
,@cmd:ValueProperty
,@cmd:ValueLanguage
and@cmd:ConceptLink
MAY
appear as attributes of XML attribute declarations and XML element declarations in the schema document for a CMDI profile, andMUST NOT
appear in the CMDI instance.
Appendices
Bibliography
- Broeder et al, 2010
- Broeder, M. Kemps-Snijders, D. Van Uytvanck, M.A. Windhouwer, P. Withers, P. Wittenburg, C. Zinn. A Data Category Registry- and Component-based Metadata Framework. In Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2010), European Language Resources Association (ELRA), Malta, May 19-21, 2010.
- Broeder et al, 2012
- Broeder, M. Windhouwer, D. van Uytvanck, T. Goosen, T. Trippel. CMDI: a Component Metadata Infrastructure. In the Proceedings of the Metadata 2012 Workshop on Describing Language Resources with Metadata: Towards Flexibility and Interoperability in the Documentation of Language Resources. At LREC 2012, Istanbul, Turkey, May 22, 2012.
- CLARIN Component Registry
- https://www.clarin.eu/componentregistry
- CLARIN Concept Registry
- http://www.clarin.eu/ccr/
- CLARIN CE 2014-0318
- CMDI 1.2 changes - executive summary, Technical Report CD-2014-0318, April 2014,
http://www.clarin.eu/content/cmdi-12-changes-executive-summary
- CLARIN ERIC
- http://www.clarin.eu/
- CMDI toolkit
- hdl:11372/CMDI-0001
- Durco et al, 2013
- Durco, M. Windhouwer. Semantic Mapping in CLARIN Component Metadata. In E. Garoufallou and J. Greenberg (eds.), Metadata and Semantics Research (MTSR 2013), CCIS Vol. 390, Springer, Thessaloniki, Greece, November 20-22, 2013.
- ISO 1087-1:2000
- Terminology work -- Vocabulary -- Part 1: Theory and application, ISO, 15 October 2000,
http://www.iso.org/iso/catalogue_detail.htm?csnumber=20057
- ISO 12620:2009
- Terminology and other language and content resources -- Specification of data categories and management of a Data Category Registry for language resources, ISO, 15 December 2009,
http://www.iso.org/iso/home/store/catalogue_tc/catalogue_detail.htm?csnumber=37243
(Withdrawn)
- ISO/IEC 19757-2:2003
- Information technology -- Document Schema Definition Language (DSDL) -- Part 2: Regular-grammar-based validation -- RELAX NG, December 1, 2003,
http://www.iso.org/iso/iso_catalogue/catalogue_ics/catalogue_detail_ics.htm?csnumber=37605
- Merriam-Webster Dictionary and Thesaurus
- http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary
- Uytvanck, Van et al, 2012
- Van Uytvanck, H. Stehouwer, L. Lampen. Semantic metadata mapping in practice: the Virtual Language Observatory. In the Proceedings of the Eight International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC'12), European Language Resources Association (ELRA), Istanbul, Turkey, May 23-25, 2012.
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