1 / 12

The CF Conventions: Options for Sustained Support Involving Unidata

Russ Rew Unidata Policy Committee May 12, 2008. The CF Conventions: Options for Sustained Support Involving Unidata. What are the CF Conventions?. An international community standard for encoding Climate and weather Forecast metadata in netCDF files: cfconventions.org

dante
Download Presentation

The CF Conventions: Options for Sustained Support Involving Unidata

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Russ Rew Unidata Policy Committee May 12, 2008 The CF Conventions: Options for Sustained SupportInvolving Unidata

  2. What are the CF Conventions? An international community standard for encoding Climate and weather Forecast metadata in netCDF files: cfconventions.org Metadata conventions supporting interoperability for earth science data from different sources An information model for representing geoscience metadata in terms of netCDF attributes and coordinate variables Intended for both model output and observational datasets Examples of CF metadata Coordinate information needed to locate data in space and time Standard names for quantities – to determine whether data from different sources are comparable Additional grid information (e.g., grid cell bounds, cell averaging methods)‏

  3. An abstraction-level analogy Relational netCDF-CF Information Models Normalization rules CF conventions Conventions netCDF XML Exchange Formats

  4. Where is CF metadata used? Growing use, acceptance, and dependence on CF Climate: Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 3 (CMIP3) multi-model dataset for IPCC, Paleoclimate Modeling Intercomparison Project (PMIP), Hemispheric Transport of Air Pollution (HTAP), EU-funded ENSEMBLES prediction system for climate change Ocean: IOOS DMAC, GHRSST GIS: ESRI ArcGIS, OGC GALEON, WCS Various archives at ESMF, GFDL, Hadley Centre, NCAR, NOAA, … Software for analyzing, visualizing, subsetting, regridding, and aggregating data

  5. Guiding principles of CF Data should be self-describing, without external tables needed for interpretation. Conventions should only be developed as needed. Conventions should not be onerous for either data-writers or data-readers. Metadata should be readable by humans as well as interpretable by programs. Redundancy should be minimized to avoid inconsistencies when writing data.

  6. A brief history of CF Evolved from simple netCDF User Guide conventions (1989), COARDS standard (1995), Gregory-Drach-Tett (1999), and NCAR CSM (1999) conventions 2000-2003: Developed by volunteer efforts (Brian Eaton, Jonathan Gregory, Bob Drach, Karl Taylor, and Steve Hankin)‏ 2003: CF 1.0 released 2005: CF white paper discussing future governance circulated 2006: Revised white paper presented to WCRP WGCM 2007: Rules for community-initiated changes to CF conventions agreed upon 2008: CF 1.2 released, active community involvement in proposals for additions

  7. Some strengths of CF Successful international collaboration to codify best practices into a community standard Proven record of enhancing interoperability Engagement of diverse communities to capture expertise for standard names Agreement on open process for evolving conventions and reaching consensus Continued active interest and involvement from user community Commitment of some organizational resources British Atmospheric Data Centre: Standard names – (50% FTE) Lawrence Livermore: Web site and discussion forum support – (20% FTE)‏ Unidata: Library development (libcf) – (10% FTE)‏ CF issues aired at Global Organization for Earth System Science Portals annual meetings

  8. Future directions for CF Implementing CF metadata conventions for other file formats (besides netCDF) Supplying both data providers and application developers with library support for using CF Providing improvements for representing observational data and metadata Supporting more types of grids (staggered, curvilinear, nested)‏ Supporting mappings between CF and other metadata standards and conventions Use of netCDF-4 data model and format

  9. CF still needs … A CF Coordinator (scientist, data specialist) to support CF development Understanding, reviewing, summarizing, shepherding, moderating discussion for, coordinating, and improving proposals Promoting CF use and compliance in Unidata software Committed institutional resources for Support of libcf Tests of proposed extensions Data examples Stewardship

  10. Proposal for CF support at Unidata CF governing and conventions committees seeking 0.5 FTE CF coordinator with broad scientific knowledge, data expertise, and passion Trusted institutional support for hosting CF coordinator (Unidata)‏ Shared funding from CF beneficiaries (BADC, NOAA/NCEP, NOAA/NCDC, NOAA/OAR, DoE, Navy, NASA, GHRSST, NCAR, ...)? Propose exploring a new partnership between CF community and Unidata CF conventions governance teleconference scheduled on May 16, 2008, to discuss strategies for getting resources to advance CF development, including seeking funding for 0.5 FTE at Unidata

  11. Some Policy Committee options Endorse a greater emphasis on both the CF conventions layer in Unidata software and more focus on helping to advance CF, for the benefits it brings to the current Unidata community and to interoperability of tools and data in other communities. Endorse specific arrangement of an additional CF coordinator and data specialist at Unidata Program Center, supported by non-NSF funds. Suggest other possible sources of funding support for CF infrastructure. … ?

  12. Concluding comments CF has undergone a two-year transition from informal maintenance by its authors to community governance. The CF Standard Names transition, with 0.5 FTE dedicated at BADC, has been very successful. The CF Conventions transition has been moderately successful, but needs more resources. Wide usage and real-world experience suggests CF metadata conventions are highly suitable for a broad community of data providers and users. To guarantee maintenance and ensure persistence as an internet resource, CF will need both Continued community participation Resources and trusted organizations to provide stewardship

More Related