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BibUpload enables you to upload bibliographic data in MARCXML format into Invenio bibliographic database. It is also used internally by other Invenio modules as the sole entrance of metadata into the bibliographic databases.
Note that before uploading a MARCXML file, you may want to run
provided /opt/invenio/bin/xmlmarclint
on it in order
to verify its correctness.
BibUpload takes a MARCXML file as its input. There is nothing to be configured for these files. If the files have to be coverted into MARCXML from some other format, structured or not, this is usually done beforehand via BibConvert module.
Note that if you are using external system numbers for your records, such as when your records are being synchronized from an external system, then BibUpload knows about the tag 970 as the one containing external system number. (To change this 970 tag into something else, you would have to edit BibUpload config source file.)
Note also that in the similar way BibUpload knows about OAI identifiers, so that it will refuse to insert the same OAI harvested record twice, for example.
Consider that you have an MARCXML file containing new records that is to be uploaded into the Invenio. (For example, it might have been produced by BibConvert.) To finish the upload, you would call the BibUpload script in the insert mode as follows:
In the insert mode, all the records from the file will be treated as new. This means that they should not contain neither 001 tags (holding record IDs) nor 970 tags (holding external system numbers). BibUpload would refuse to upload records having these tags, in order to prevent potential double uploading. If your file does contain 001 or 970, then chances are that you want to update existing records, not re-upload them as new, and so BibUpload will warn you about this and will refuse to continue.$ bibupload -i file.xml
For example, to insert a new record, your file should look like this:
<record> <datafield tag="100" ind1=" " ind2=" "> <subfield code="a">Doe, John</subfield> </datafield> <datafield tag="245" ind1=" " ind2=" "> <subfield code="a">On The Foo And Bar</subfield> </datafield> </record>
A special mode of BibUpload that is thigthly connected with BibEdit is the Holding Pen mode.
When you insert a record using the holding pen mode such as in the following example:
the records are not actually integrated into the database, but are instead put into an intermediate space called holding pen, where authorized curators can review them, manipulate them and eventually approve them.$ bibupload -o file.xml
The holding pen is integrated with BibEdit.
When you want to update existing records, with the new content from your input MARCXML file, then your input file should contain either tags 001 (holding record IDs) or tag 970 (holding external system numbers). BibUpload will try to match existing records via 001 and 970 and if it finds a record in the database that corresponds to a record from the file, it will update its content. Otherwise it will signal an error saying that it could not find the record-to-be-updated.
For example, to update a title of record #123 via correct mode, your input file should contain record ID in the 001 tag and the title in 245 tag as follows:
<record> <controlfield tag="001">123</controlfield> <datafield tag="245" ind1=" " ind2=" "> <subfield code="a">My Newly Updated Title</subfield> </datafield> </record>
There are several updating modes:
-r, --replace Replace existing records by those from the XML MARC file. The original content is wiped out and fully replaced. Signals error if record is not found via matching record IDs or system numbers. Fields defined in Invenio config variable CFG_BIBUPLOAD_STRONG_TAGS are not replaced. Note also that `-r' can be combined with `-i' into an `-ir' option that would automatically either insert records as new if they are not found in the system, or correct existing records if they are found to exist. -a, --append Append fields from XML MARC file at the end of existing records. The original content is enriched only. Signals error if record is not found via matching record IDs or system numbers. -c, --correct Correct fields of existing records by those from XML MARC file. The original record content is modified only on those fields from the XML MARC file where both the tags and the indicators match: the original fields are removed and replaced by those from the XML MARC file. Fields not present in XML MARC file are not changed (unlike the -r option). Fields with "provenance" subfields defined in 'CFG_BIBUPLOAD_CONTROLLED_PROVENANCE_TAGS' are protected against deletion unless the input MARCXML contains a matching provenance value. Signals error if record is not found via matching record IDs or system numbers. -d, --delete Delete fields of existing records that are contained in the XML MARC file. The fields in the original record that are not present in the XML MARC file are preserved. This is incompatible with FFT (see below).
Note that if you are using the --replace
mode, and you specify
in the incoming MARCXML a 001 tag with a value representing a record ID that
does not exist, bibupload will not create the record on-the-fly unless the
--force
parameter was also passed on the command line. This is done
in order to avoid creating, by mistake, holes in the database list of record
identifiers. When you ask, in fact, to --replace
a non-existing record
imposing a record ID with a value of, say, 1 000 000
and, subsequently, you
--insert
a new record, this will automatically receive an ID with
the value 1 000 001
.
If you combine the --pretend
parameter with the above updating modes you can actually test what would be executed without modifying the database or altering the system status.
Note that the insert/update modes can be combined together. For example, if you have a file that contains a mixture of new records with possibly some records to be updated, then you can run:
In this case BibUpload will try to do an update (for records having either 001 or 970 identifiers), or an insert (for the other ones).$ bibupload -i -r file.xml
The fulltext files can be uploaded and revised via a special FFT ("fulltext file transfer") tag with the following semantic:
FFT $a ... location of the docfile to upload (a filesystem path or a URL) $d ... docfile description (optional) (will go in 8564_ $y) $f ... format (optional; if not set, deduced from $a) $m ... new desired docfile name (optional; used for renaming files) $n ... docfile name (optional; if not set, deduced from $a) $o ... flag (repeatable subfield) $r ... restriction (optional, see below) $s ... set timestamp (optional, see below) $t ... docfile type (e.g. Main, Additional) $v ... version (used only with REVERT and DELETE-FILE, see below) $x ... url/path for an icon (optional) $z ... comment (optional) (will go in 8564_ $z) $w ... MoreInfo modification of the document $p ... MoreInfo modification of a current version of the document $b ... MoreInfo modification of a current version and format of the document $u ... MoreInfo modification of a format (of any version) of the document
For example, to upload a new fulltext file thesis.pdf
associated to record ID 123:
<record> <controlfield tag="001">123</controlfield> <datafield tag="FFT" ind1=" " ind2=" "> <subfield code="a">/tmp/thesis.pdf</subfield> <subfield code="t">Main</subfield> <subfield code="d"> This is the fulltext version of my thesis in the PDF format. </subfield> <subfield code="z"> Chapter 5 still needs some revision. </subfield> </datafield> </record>
The FFT tag can be repetitive, so one can pass along another FFT tag instance containing a pointer to e.g. the thesis defence slides. The subfields of an FFT tag are non-repetitive.
When more than one FFT tag is specified for the same document (e.g. for adding more than one format at a time), if $t (docfile type), $m (new desired docfile name), $r (restriction), $v (version), $x (url/path for an icon), are specified, they should be identically specified for each single entry of FFT. E.g. if you want to specify an icon for a document with two formats (say .pdf and .doc), you'll write two FFT tags, both containing the same $x subfield.
The bibupload process, when it encounters FFT tags, will
automatically populate fulltext storage space
(/opt/invenio/var/data/files
) and metadata record
associated tables (bibrec_bibdoc
, bibdoc
) as
appropriate. It will also enrich the 856 tags (URL tags) of the MARC
metadata of the record in question with references to the latest
versions of each file.
Note that for $a and $x subfields filesystem paths must be absolute
(e.g. /tmp/icon.gif
is valid,
while Destkop/icon.gif
is not) and they must be readable
by the user/group of the bibupload process that will handle the FFT.
The bibupload process supports the usual modes correct, append, replace, insert with a semantic that is somewhat similar to the semantic of the metadata upload:
Metadata Fulltext objects being uploaded MARC field instances characterized by tags (010-999) fulltext files characterized by unique file names (FFT $n) insert insert new record; must not exist insert new files; must not exist append append new tag instances for the given tag XXX, regardless of existing tag instances append new files, if filename (i.e. new format) not already present correct correct tag instances for the given tag XXX; delete existing ones and replace with given ones correct files with the given filename; add new revision or delete file; if the docname does not exist the file is added replace replace all tags, whatever XXX are replace all files, whatever filenames are delete delete all existing tag instances not supported
Note that you can mix regular MARC tags with special FFT tags in the incoming XML input file. Both record metadata and record files will be updated as a result. Hence beware with some input modes, such as replace mode, if you would like to touch only files.
Note that in append and insert mode the $m
is ignored.
In order to rename a document just use the the correct mode specifing in the $n subfield the original docname that should be renamed and in $m the new name.
Special values can be assigned to the $t subfield.
Value | Meaning |
---|---|
PURGE | In order to purge previous file revisions (i.e. in order to keep only the latest file version), please use the correct mode with $n docname and $t PURGE as the special keyword. |
DELETE | In order to delete all existing versions of a file, making it effectively hidden, please use the correct mode with $n docname and $t DELETE as the special keyword. |
EXPUNGE | In order to expunge (i.e. remove completely, also from the filesystem) all existing versions of a file, making it effectively disappear, please use the correct mode with $n docname and $t EXPUNGE as the special keyword. |
FIX-MARC | In order to synchronize MARC to the bibrec/bibdoc structure (e.g. after an update or a tweak in the database), please use the correct mode with $n docname and $t FIX-MARC as the special keyword. |
FIX-ALL | In order to fix a record (i.e. put all its linked documents in a coherent state) and synchronize the MARC to the table, please use the correct mode with $n docname and $t FIX-ALL as the special keyword. |
REVERT | In order to revert to a previous file revision (i.e. to create a new revision with the same content as some previous revision had), please use the correct mode with $n docname, $t REVERT as the special keyword and $v the number corresponding to the desired version. |
DELETE-FILE | In order to delete a particular file added by mistake, please use the correct mode with $n docname, $t DELETE-FILE, specifing $v version and $f format. Note that this operation is not reversible. Note that if you don't spcify a version, the last version will be used. |
In order to preserve previous comments and descriptions when correcting, please use the KEEP-OLD-VALUE special keyword with the desired $d and $z subfield.
The $r subfield can contain a string that can be use to restrict the given document. The same value must be specified for all the format of a given document. By default the keyword will be used as the status parameter for the "viewrestrdoc" action, which can be used to give access right/restriction to desired user. e.g. if you set the keyword "thesis", you can the connect the "thesisviewer" to the action "viewrestrdoc" with parameter "status" set to "thesis". Then all the user which are linked with the "thesisviewer" role will be able to download the document. Instead any other user which are not considered as authors for the given record will not be allowed. Note, if you use the keyword "KEEP-OLD-VALUE" the previous restrictions if applicable will be kept.
More advanced document-level restriction is indeed possible. If the value contains infact:
Some special flags might be set via FFT and associated with the current document by using the $o subfield. This feature is experimental. Currently only two flags are actively considered:
Note that each time bibupload is called on a record, the 8564 tags pointing to locally stored files are recreated on the basis of the full-text files connected to the record. Thus, if you whish to update some 8564 tag pointing to a locally managed file, the only way to perform this is through the FFT tag, not by editing 8564 directly.
Note as well that:
The subfield $s of FFT can be used to set time stamp of the uploaded file to a given value, e.g. 2007-05-04 03:02:01. This is useful when uploading old files. When $s is not present, the current time will be used.
Sometimes, to implement a particular workflow or policy in a digital repository, it might be nice to receive an automatic machine friendly feedback that aknowledges the outcome of a bibupload execution. To this aim the --callback-url command line parameter can be used. This parameter expects a URL to be specified to which a JSON-serialized response will POSTed.
Say, you have an external service reachable via the URL http://www.example.org/accept_feedback. If the argument:
--callback-url http://www.example.org/accept_feedbackis added to the usual bibupload call, at the end of the execution of the corresponding bibupload task, an HTTP POST request will be performed, if possible to the given URL, reporting the outcome of the bibupload execution as a JSON-serialized response with the following structure:
For example, a possible JSON response posted to a specified URL can look like:
{ "results": [ { "recid": -1, "error_message": "ERROR: can not retrieve the record identifier", "success": false }, { "recid": 1000, "error_message": "", "success": true, "marcxml": "", "url": "http://www.example.org/record/1000" }, ... ] } 1000 ...
Note that, currently, in case the specified URL can not be reached at the time of the POST request, the whole bibupload task will fail.
If you use the same callback URL to receive the feedback from more than one bibupload request you might want to be able to correctly identify each bibupload call with the corresponding feedback. For this reason you can pass to the bibupload call an additional argument:
--nonce VALUEwhere value can be any string you wish. Such string will be then added to the JSON structure, as in (supposing you specified --nonce 1234):
{ "nonce": "1234", "results": [ { "recid": -1, "error_message": "ERROR: can not retrieve the record identifier", "success": false }, { "recid": 1000, "error_message": "", "success": true, "marcxml": "", "url": "http://www.example.org/record/1000" }, ... ] } 1000 ...
Some bits of meta-data should not be viewed by Invenio users directly and stored in the MARC format. This includes all types of non-standard data related to records and documents, for example flags realted to documetns (sepcified inside of a FFT tage) or bits of semantic information related to entities managed in Invenio. This type of data is usually machine generated and should be used by modules of Invenio internally.
Invenio provides a general mechanism allowing to store objects related to different entities of Invenio. This mechanism is called MoreInfo and resembles well known more-info solutions. Every entity (document, version of a document, format of a particular version of a document, relation between documents) can be assigned a dictionary of arbitrary values. The dictionary is divided into namespaces, which allow to separate data from different modules and serving different purposes.
BibUpload, the only gateway to uploading data into the Invenio database, allows to populate MoreInfo structures. MoreInfo related to a given entity can be modified by providing a Pickle-serialised byte64 encoded Python object having following structure:
{ "namespace": { "key": "value", "key2": "value2" } }
For example the above dictionary should be uploaded as
KGRwMQpTJ25hbWVzcGFjZScKcDIKKGRwMwpTJ2tleTInCnA0ClMndmFsdWUyJwpwNQpzUydrZXknCnA2ClMndmFsdWUnCnA3CnNzLg==
Which is a base-64 encoded representation of the string
(dp0\nS'namespace'\np1\n(dp2\nS'key2'\np3\nS'value2'\np4\nsS'key'\np5\nS'value'\np6\nss.
Removing of data keys from a dictionary can happen by providing None value as a value. Empty namespaces are considered non-existent.
The string representation of modifications to the MoreInfo dictionary can be provided in several places, depending, to which object it should be attached. The most general upload method, the BDM tag has following semantic:
BDM $r ... Identifier of a relation between documents (optional) $i ... Identifier of a BibDoc (optional) $v ... Version of a BibDoc (optional) $n ... Name of a BibDoc (within a current record) (optional) $f ... Format of a BibDoc (optional) $m ... Serialised update to the MoreInfo dictionary
All (except $m) subfields are optional and allow to identify an entity to which MoreInfo should refer.
Besides the BDM tag, MoreInfo can be transfered using special subfields of FFT and BDR tags. The first one allows to modify MoreInfo of a newly uploaded document, the second of a relation. The additional subfields have following semantic:
FFT $w ... MoreInfo modification of the document $p ... MoreInfo modification of a current version of the document $s ... MoreInfo modification of a current version and format of the document $u ... MoreInfo modification of a format (of any version) of the document BDR $m ... MoreInfo modification of a relation between BibDocs
One of additional pieces of non-MARC data which can be uploaded to Invenio are relations between documents. Similarly to MoreInfos, relations are intended to be used by Invenio modules. The semantics of BDR field allowing to upload relations looks as follows
BDR $r ... Identifier of the relation (optional, can be provided if modifying a known relation) $i ... Identifier of the first document $n ... Name of the first document (within the current record) (optional) $v ... Version of the first document (optional) $f ... Format of the first document (optional) $j ... Identifier of the second document $o ... Name of the second document (within the current record) (optional) $w ... Version of the second document (optional) $g ... Format of the second document (optional) $t ... Type of the relation $m ... Modification of the MoreInfo of the relation $d ... Special field. if value=DELETE, relation is removed
Behavious of BDR tag in different upload modes:
insert, append | Inserts new relation if necessary. Appends fields to the MoreInfo structure |
correct, replace | Creates new relation if necessary, replaces the entire content of MoreInfo field. |
In many cases, users want to upload large collections of documents using single BibUpload tasks. The infrastructure described in the rest of this manual allows easy upload of multiple documents, but lacks facilities for relating them to each other. A sample use-case which can not be satisfied by simple usage of FFT tags is uploading a document and relating it to another which is either already in the database or is being uploaded within the same BibUpload task. BibUpload provides a mechanism of temportaty identifiers which allows to serve scenarios similar to the aforementioned.
Temporary identifier is a string (unique in the context of a single MARC XML document), which replaces document number or a version number. In the context of BibDoc manipulations (FFT, BDR and BDM tags), temporary identifeirs can appear everywhere where version or numerical id are required. If a temporary identifier appears in a context of document already having an ID assigned, it will be interpreted as this already existent number. If newly created document is assigned a temporary identifier, the newly generated numerical ID is assigned to the temporary id. In order to be recognised as a temporary identifier, a string has to begin with a prefix TMP:. The mechanism of temporary identifiers can not be used in the con text of records, but only with BibDocs.
A BibUpload input using temporary identifiers can look like:
<collection xmlns="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim"> <record> <datafield tag="100" ind1=" " ind2=" "> <subfield code="a">This is a record of the publication</subfield> </datafield> <datafield tag="FFT" ind1=" " ind2=" "> <subfield code="a">http://somedomain.com/document.pdf</subfield> <subfield code="t">Main</subfield> <subfield code="n">docname</subfield> <subfield code="i">TMP:id_identifier1</subfield> <subfield code="v">TMP:ver_identifier1</subfield> </datafield> </record> <record> <datafield tag="100" ind1=" " ind2=" "> <subfield code="a">This is a record of a dataset extracted from the publication</subfield> </datafield> <datafield tag="FFT" ind1=" " ind2=" "> <subfield code="a">http://sample.com/dataset.data</subfield> <subfield code="t">Main</subfield> <subfield code="n">docname2</subfielxd> <subfield code="i">TMP:id_identifier2</subfield> <subfield code="v">TMP:ver_identifier2</subfield> </datafield> <datafield tag="BDR" ind1=" " ind2=" "> <subfield code="i">TMP:id_identifier1</subfield> <subfield code="v">TMP:ver_identifier1</subfield> <subfield code="j">TMP:id_identifier2</subfield> <subfield code="w">TMP:ver_identifier2</subfield> <subfield code="t">is_extracted_from</subfield> </datafield> </record> </collection>
The batchuploader web interface can be used either to upload metadata files or documents. Opposed to daemon mode, actions will be executed only once.
The available upload history displays metadata and document uploads using the web interface, not daemon mode.
If it is needed to use the batch upload function from within command line, this can be achieved with a curl call, like:
$ curl -F 'file=@localfile.xml' -F 'mode=-i' https://cds.cern.ch/batchuploader/robotupload [-F 'callback_url=http://...'] -A invenio_webupload
This service provides (client, file) checking to assure the records are put into a collection the client has rights to.
To configure this permissions, check CFG_BATCHUPLOADER_WEB_ROBOT_RIGHTS variable in the configuration file.
The allowed user agents can also be defined using the CFG_BATCHUPLOADER_WEB_ROBOT_AGENT variable.
Note that you can receive machine-friendly feedbacks from the corresponding bibupload task that is launched by a given batchuploader request, by adding the optional POST field callback_url with the same semantic of the --callback-url command line parameter of bibupload (see the previous paragraph Obtaining feedbacks).
A second more RESTful interface is also available: it will suffice to append to the URL the specific mode (among "insert", "append", "correct", "delete", "replace", "insertorreplace"), as in:
https://cds.cern.ch/batchuploader/robotupload/insert
The callback_url argument can be put in query part of the URL as in:
https://cds.cern.ch/batchuploader/robotupload/insert?callback_url=http://myhandler
In case the HTTP server that is going to receive the feedback at callback_url expect the request to be encoded in application/x-www-form-urlencoded rather than application/json (e.g. if the server is implemented directly in Oracle), you can further specify the special_treatment argument and set it to oracle. The feedback will then be further encoded into an application/x-www-form-urlencoded request, with a single form key called results, which will contain the final JSON data.
The MARCXML content should then be specified as the body of the request. With curl this can be implemented as in:
$ curl -T localfile.xml https://cds.cern.ch/batchuploader/robotupload/insert?callback_url=http://... -A invenio_webupload -H "Content-Type: application/marcxml+xml"
The nonce argument that can be passed to BibUpload as described in the previous paragraph can also be specified with both robotupload interfaces. E.g.:
$ curl -F 'file=@localfile.xml' -F 'nonce=1234' -F 'mode=-i' https://cds.cern.ch/batchuploader/robotupload -F 'callback_url=http://...' -A invenio_webuploadand
$ curl -T localfile.xml https://cds.cern.ch/batchuploader/robotupload/insert?nonce=1234&callback_url=http://... -A invenio_webupload -H "Content-Type: application/marcxml+xml"
The batchuploader daemon mode is intended to be a bibsched task for document or metadata upload. The parent directory where the daemon will look for folders metadata and documents must be specified in the invenio configuration file.
An example of how directories should be arranged, considering that invenio was installed in folder /opt/invenio would be:
/opt/invenio/var/batchupload /opt/invenio/var/batchupload/documents /opt/invenio/var/batchupload/documents/append /opt/invenio/var/batchupload/documents/revise /opt/invenio/var/batchupload/metadata /opt/invenio/var/batchupload/metadata/append /opt/invenio/var/batchupload/metadata/correct /opt/invenio/var/batchupload/metadata/insert /opt/invenio/var/batchupload/metadata/replace
When running the batchuploader daemon there are two possible execution modes:
-m, --metadata Look for metadata files in folders insert, append, correct and replace. All files are uploaded and then moved to the corresponding DONE folder. -d, --documents Look for documents in folders append and revise. Uploaded files are then moved to DONE folders if possible.By default, metadata mode is used.
An example of invocation would be:
It is possible to program batch uploader to run periodically. Read the Howto-run guide to see how.$ batchuploader --documents