File: recordmodel-alvisxslt.xml

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 <chapter id="record-model-alvisxslt">
  <title>ALVIS &acro.xml; Record Model and Filter Module</title>

  <warning>
   <para>
    The functionality of this record model has been improved and
    replaced by the DOM &acro.xml; record model, see
    <xref linkend="record-model-domxml"/>.  The Alvis &acro.xml; record
    model is considered obsolete, and will eventually be removed
    from future releases of the &zebra; software.
   </para>
  </warning>

  <para>
   The record model described in this chapter applies to the fundamental,
   structured &acro.xml;
   record type <literal>alvis</literal>, introduced in
   <xref linkend="componentmodulesalvis"/>.
  </para>

  <para> This filter has been developed under the
   <ulink url="http://www.alvis.info/">ALVIS</ulink> project funded by
   the European Community under the "Information Society Technologies"
   Program (2002-2006).
  </para>


  <section id="record-model-alvisxslt-filter">
   <title>ALVIS Record Filter</title>
   <para>
    The experimental, loadable  Alvis &acro.xml;/&acro.xslt; filter module
    <literal>mod-alvis.so</literal> is packaged in the GNU/Debian package
    <literal>libidzebra1.4-mod-alvis</literal>.
    It is invoked by the <filename>zebra.cfg</filename> configuration statement
    <screen>
     recordtype.xml: alvis.db/filter_alvis_conf.xml
    </screen>
    In this example on all data files with suffix
    <filename>*.xml</filename>, where the
    Alvis &acro.xslt; filter configuration file is found in the
    path <filename>db/filter_alvis_conf.xml</filename>.
   </para>
   <para>The Alvis &acro.xslt; filter configuration file must be
    valid &acro.xml;. It might look like this (This example is
    used for indexing and display of &acro.oai; harvested records):
    <screen>
     &lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?&gt;
     &lt;schemaInfo&gt;
     &lt;schema name="identity" stylesheet="xsl/identity.xsl" /&gt;
     &lt;schema name="index" identifier="http://indexdata.dk/zebra/xslt/1"
     stylesheet="xsl/oai2index.xsl" /&gt;
     &lt;schema name="dc" stylesheet="xsl/oai2dc.xsl" /&gt;
     &lt;!-- use split level 2 when indexing whole OAI Record lists --&gt;
     &lt;split level="2"/&gt;
     &lt;/schemaInfo&gt;
    </screen>
   </para>
   <para>
    All named stylesheets defined inside
    <literal>schema</literal> element tags
    are for presentation after search, including
    the indexing stylesheet (which is a great debugging help). The
    names defined in the <literal>name</literal> attributes must be
    unique, these are the literal <literal>schema</literal> or
    <literal>element set</literal> names used in
    <ulink url="http://www.loc.gov/standards/sru/srw/">&acro.srw;</ulink>,
    <ulink url="&url.sru;">&acro.sru;</ulink> and
    &acro.z3950; protocol queries.
    The paths in the <literal>stylesheet</literal> attributes
    are relative to zebras working directory, or absolute to file
    system root.
   </para>
   <para>
    The <literal>&lt;split level="2"/&gt;</literal> decides where the
    &acro.xml; Reader shall split the
    collections of records into individual records, which then are
    loaded into &acro.dom;, and have the indexing &acro.xslt; stylesheet applied.
   </para>
   <para>
    There must be exactly one indexing &acro.xslt; stylesheet, which is
    defined by the magic attribute
    <literal>identifier="http://indexdata.dk/zebra/xslt/1"</literal>.
   </para>

   <section id="record-model-alvisxslt-internal">
    <title>ALVIS Internal Record Representation</title>
    <para>When indexing, an &acro.xml; Reader is invoked to split the input
     files into suitable record &acro.xml; pieces. Each record piece is then
     transformed to an &acro.xml; &acro.dom; structure, which is essentially the
     record model. Only &acro.xslt; transformations can be applied during
     index, search and retrieval. Consequently, output formats are
     restricted to whatever &acro.xslt; can deliver from the record &acro.xml;
     structure, be it other &acro.xml; formats, HTML, or plain text. In case
     you have <literal>libxslt1</literal> running with E&acro.xslt; support,
     you can use this functionality inside the Alvis
     filter configuration &acro.xslt; stylesheets.
    </para>
   </section>

   <section id="record-model-alvisxslt-canonical">
    <title>ALVIS Canonical Indexing Format</title>
    <para>The output of the indexing &acro.xslt; stylesheets must contain
     certain elements in the magic
     <literal>xmlns:z="http://indexdata.dk/zebra/xslt/1"</literal>
     namespace. The output of the &acro.xslt; indexing transformation is then
     parsed using &acro.dom; methods, and the contained instructions are
     performed on the <emphasis>magic elements and their
      subtrees</emphasis>.
    </para>
    <para>
     For example, the output of the command
     <screen>
      xsltproc xsl/oai2index.xsl one-record.xml
     </screen>
     might look like this:
     <screen>
      &lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?&gt;
      &lt;z:record xmlns:z="http://indexdata.dk/zebra/xslt/1"
      z:id="oai:JTRS:CP-3290---Volume-I"
      z:rank="47896"&gt;
      &lt;z:index name="oai_identifier" type="0"&gt;
      oai:JTRS:CP-3290---Volume-I&lt;/z:index&gt;
      &lt;z:index name="oai_datestamp" type="0"&gt;2004-07-09&lt;/z:index&gt;
      &lt;z:index name="oai_setspec" type="0"&gt;jtrs&lt;/z:index&gt;
      &lt;z:index name="dc_all" type="w"&gt;
      &lt;z:index name="dc_title" type="w"&gt;Proceedings of the 4th
      International Conference and Exhibition:
      World Congress on Superconductivity - Volume I&lt;/z:index&gt;
      &lt;z:index name="dc_creator" type="w"&gt;Kumar Krishen and *Calvin
      Burnham, Editors&lt;/z:index&gt;
      &lt;/z:index&gt;
      &lt;/z:record&gt;
     </screen>
    </para>
    <para>This means the following: From the original &acro.xml; file
     <literal>one-record.xml</literal> (or from the &acro.xml; record &acro.dom; of the
     same form coming from a split input file), the indexing
     stylesheet produces an indexing &acro.xml; record, which is defined by
     the <literal>record</literal> element in the magic namespace
     <literal>xmlns:z="http://indexdata.dk/zebra/xslt/1"</literal>.
     &zebra; uses the content of
     <literal>z:id="oai:JTRS:CP-3290---Volume-I"</literal> as internal
     record ID, and - in case static ranking is set - the content of
     <literal>z:rank="47896"</literal> as static rank. Following the
     discussion in <xref linkend="administration-ranking"/>
     we see that this records is internally ordered
     lexicographically according to the value of the string
     <literal>oai:JTRS:CP-3290---Volume-I47896</literal>.
     <!-- The type of action performed during indexing is defined by
     <literal>z:type="update"&gt;</literal>, with recognized values
     <literal>insert</literal>, <literal>update</literal>, and
     <literal>delete</literal>. -->
    </para>
    <para>In this example, the following literal indexes are constructed:
     <screen>
      oai_identifier
      oai_datestamp
      oai_setspec
      dc_all
      dc_title
      dc_creator
     </screen>
     where the indexing type is defined in the
     <literal>type</literal> attribute
     (any value from the standard configuration
     file <filename>default.idx</filename> will do). Finally, any
     <literal>text()</literal> node content recursively contained
     inside the <literal>index</literal> will be filtered through the
     appropriate char map for character normalization, and will be
     inserted in the index.
    </para>
    <para>
     Specific to this example, we see that the single word
     <literal>oai:JTRS:CP-3290---Volume-I</literal> will be literal,
     byte for byte without any form of character normalization,
     inserted into the index named <literal>oai:identifier</literal>,
     the text
     <literal>Kumar Krishen and *Calvin Burnham, Editors</literal>
     will be inserted using the <literal>w</literal> character
     normalization defined in <filename>default.idx</filename> into
     the index <literal>dc:creator</literal> (that is, after character
     normalization the index will keep the individual words
     <literal>kumar</literal>, <literal>krishen</literal>,
     <literal>and</literal>, <literal>calvin</literal>,
     <literal>burnham</literal>, and <literal>editors</literal>), and
     finally both the texts
     <literal>Proceedings of the 4th International Conference and Exhibition:
      World Congress on Superconductivity - Volume I</literal>
     and
     <literal>Kumar Krishen and *Calvin Burnham, Editors</literal>
     will be inserted into the index <literal>dc:all</literal> using
     the same character normalization map <literal>w</literal>.
    </para>
    <para>
     Finally, this example configuration can be queried using &acro.pqf;
     queries, either transported by &acro.z3950;, (here using a yaz-client)
     <screen>
      <![CDATA[
      Z> open localhost:9999
      Z> elem dc
      Z> form xml
      Z>
      Z> f @attr 1=dc_creator Kumar
      Z> scan @attr 1=dc_creator adam
      Z>
      Z> f @attr 1=dc_title @attr 4=2 "proceeding congress superconductivity"
      Z> scan @attr 1=dc_title abc
      ]]>
     </screen>
     or the proprietary
     extensions <literal>x-pquery</literal> and
     <literal>x-pScanClause</literal> to
     &acro.sru;, and &acro.srw;
     <screen>
      <![CDATA[
      http://localhost:9999/?version=1.1&operation=searchRetrieve&x-pquery=%40attr+1%3Ddc_creator+%40attr+4%3D6+%22the
      http://localhost:9999/?version=1.1&operation=scan&x-pScanClause=@attr+1=dc_date+@attr+4=2+a
      ]]>
     </screen>
     See <xref linkend="zebrasrv-sru"/> for more information on &acro.sru;/&acro.srw;
     configuration, and <xref linkend="gfs-config"/> or the &yaz;
     <ulink url="&url.yaz.cql;">&acro.cql; section</ulink>
     for the details or the &yaz; frontend server.
    </para>
    <para>
     Notice that there are no <filename>*.abs</filename>,
     <filename>*.est</filename>, <filename>*.map</filename>, or other &acro.grs1;
     filter configuration files involves in this process, and that the
     literal index names are used during search and retrieval.
    </para>
   </section>
  </section>


  <section id="record-model-alvisxslt-conf">
   <title>ALVIS Record Model Configuration</title>


   <section id="record-model-alvisxslt-index">
    <title>ALVIS Indexing Configuration</title>
    <para>
     As mentioned above, there can be only one indexing
     stylesheet, and configuration of the indexing process is a synonym
     of writing an &acro.xslt; stylesheet which produces &acro.xml; output containing the
     magic elements discussed in
     <xref linkend="record-model-alvisxslt-internal"/>.
     Obviously, there are million of different ways to accomplish this
     task, and some comments and code snippets are in order to lead
     our Padawan's on the right track to the  good side of the force.
    </para>
    <para>
     Stylesheets can be written in the <emphasis>pull</emphasis> or
     the <emphasis>push</emphasis> style: <emphasis>pull</emphasis>
     means that the output &acro.xml; structure is taken as starting point of
     the internal structure of the &acro.xslt; stylesheet, and portions of
     the input &acro.xml; are <emphasis>pulled</emphasis> out and inserted
     into the right spots of the output &acro.xml; structure. On the other
     side, <emphasis>push</emphasis> &acro.xslt; stylesheets are recursively
     calling their template definitions, a process which is commanded
     by the input &acro.xml; structure, and are triggered to produce some output &acro.xml;
     whenever some special conditions in the input stylesheets are
     met. The <emphasis>pull</emphasis> type is well-suited for input
     &acro.xml; with strong and well-defined structure and semantics, like the
     following &acro.oai; indexing example, whereas the
     <emphasis>push</emphasis> type might be the only possible way to
     sort out deeply recursive input &acro.xml; formats.
    </para>
    <para>
     A <emphasis>pull</emphasis> stylesheet example used to index
     &acro.oai; harvested records could use some of the following template
     definitions:
     <screen>
      <![CDATA[
      <xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
      xmlns:z="http://indexdata.dk/zebra/xslt/1"
      xmlns:oai="http://www.openarchives.org/&acro.oai;/2.0/"
      xmlns:oai_dc="http://www.openarchives.org/&acro.oai;/2.0/oai_dc/"
      xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
      version="1.0">

      <xsl:output indent="yes" method="xml" version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"/>

      <!-- disable all default text node output -->
      <xsl:template match="text()"/>

      <!-- match on oai xml record root -->
      <xsl:template match="/">
      <z:record z:id="{normalize-space(oai:record/oai:header/oai:identifier)}">
      <!-- you might want to use z:rank="{some &acro.xslt; function here}" -->
      <xsl:apply-templates/>
     </z:record>
     </xsl:template>

      <!-- &acro.oai; indexing templates -->
      <xsl:template match="oai:record/oai:header/oai:identifier">
      <z:index name="oai_identifier" type="0">
      <xsl:value-of select="."/>
     </z:index>
     </xsl:template>

      <!-- etc, etc -->

      <!-- DC specific indexing templates -->
      <xsl:template match="oai:record/oai:metadata/oai_dc:dc/dc:title">
      <z:index name="dc_title" type="w">
      <xsl:value-of select="."/>
     </z:index>
     </xsl:template>

      <!-- etc, etc -->

     </xsl:stylesheet>
      ]]>
     </screen>
    </para>
    <para>
     Notice also,
     that the names and types of the indexes can be defined in the
     indexing &acro.xslt; stylesheet <emphasis>dynamically according to
      content in the original &acro.xml; records</emphasis>, which has
     opportunities for great power and wizardry as well as grande
     disaster.
    </para>
    <para>
     The following excerpt of a <emphasis>push</emphasis> stylesheet
     <emphasis>might</emphasis>
     be a good idea according to your strict control of the &acro.xml;
     input format (due to rigorous checking against well-defined and
     tight RelaxNG or &acro.xml; Schema's, for example):
     <screen>
      <![CDATA[
      <xsl:template name="element-name-indexes">
      <z:index name="{name()}" type="w">
      <xsl:value-of select="'1'"/>
     </z:index>
     </xsl:template>
      ]]>
     </screen>
     This template creates indexes which have the name of the working
     node of any input  &acro.xml; file, and assigns a '1' to the index.
     The example query
     <literal>find @attr 1=xyz 1</literal>
     finds all files which contain at least one
     <literal>xyz</literal> &acro.xml; element. In case you can not control
     which element names the input files contain, you might ask for
     disaster and bad karma using this technique.
    </para>
    <para>
     One variation over the theme <emphasis>dynamically created
      indexes</emphasis> will definitely be unwise:
     <screen>
      <![CDATA[
      <!-- match on oai xml record root -->
      <xsl:template match="/">
      <z:record>

      <!-- create dynamic index name from input content -->
      <xsl:variable name="dynamic_content">
      <xsl:value-of select="oai:record/oai:header/oai:identifier"/>
     </xsl:variable>

      <!-- create zillions of indexes with unknown names -->
      <z:index name="{$dynamic_content}" type="w">
      <xsl:value-of select="oai:record/oai:metadata/oai_dc:dc"/>
     </z:index>
     </z:record>

     </xsl:template>
      ]]>
     </screen>
     Don't be tempted to cross
     the line to the dark side of the force, Padawan; this leads
     to suffering and pain, and universal
     disintegration of your project schedule.
    </para>
   </section>

   <section id="record-model-alvisxslt-elementset">
    <title>ALVIS Exchange Formats</title>
    <para>
     An exchange format can be anything which can be the outcome of an
     &acro.xslt; transformation, as far as the stylesheet is registered in
     the main Alvis &acro.xslt; filter configuration file, see
     <xref linkend="record-model-alvisxslt-filter"/>.
     In principle anything that can be expressed in  &acro.xml;, HTML, and
     TEXT can be the output of a <literal>schema</literal> or
     <literal>element set</literal> directive during search, as long as
     the information comes from the
     <emphasis>original input record &acro.xml; &acro.dom; tree</emphasis>
     (and not the transformed and <emphasis>indexed</emphasis> &acro.xml;!!).
    </para>
    <para>
     In addition, internal administrative information from the &zebra;
     indexer can be accessed during record retrieval. The following
     example is a summary of the possibilities:
     <screen>
      <![CDATA[
      <xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
      xmlns:z="http://indexdata.dk/zebra/xslt/1"
      version="1.0">

      <!-- register internal zebra parameters -->
      <xsl:param name="id" select="''"/>
      <xsl:param name="filename" select="''"/>
      <xsl:param name="score" select="''"/>
      <xsl:param name="schema" select="''"/>

      <xsl:output indent="yes" method="xml" version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"/>

      <!-- use then for display of internal information -->
      <xsl:template match="/">
      <z:zebra>
      <id><xsl:value-of select="$id"/></id>
      <filename><xsl:value-of select="$filename"/></filename>
      <score><xsl:value-of select="$score"/></score>
      <schema><xsl:value-of select="$schema"/></schema>
     </z:zebra>
     </xsl:template>

     </xsl:stylesheet>
      ]]>
     </screen>
    </para>

   </section>

   <section id="record-model-alvisxslt-example">
    <title>ALVIS Filter &acro.oai; Indexing Example</title>
    <para>
     The source code tarball contains a working Alvis filter example in
     the directory <filename>examples/alvis-oai/</filename>, which
     should get you started.
    </para>
    <para>
     More example data can be harvested from any &acro.oai; compliant server,
     see details at the  &acro.oai;
     <ulink url="http://www.openarchives.org/">
      http://www.openarchives.org/</ulink> web site, and the community
     links at
     <ulink url="http://www.openarchives.org/community/index.html">
      http://www.openarchives.org/community/index.html</ulink>.
     There is a  tutorial
     found at
     <ulink url="http://www.oaforum.org/tutorial/">
      http://www.oaforum.org/tutorial/</ulink>.
    </para>
   </section>

  </section>


 </chapter>



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