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Ray Denenberg

Project Briefing. “ Key Standards Updates ” SRU. April 4, 2006; Washington. Rob Sanderson. Ray Denenberg. SRU Events. Version 1.1 February 2004 Several Editorial Board Meetings Implementors Meetings: June 2005, Chicago March 2006, The Hague. Results/Decisions. Administrative

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Ray Denenberg

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  1. Project Briefing “Key Standards Updates” SRU April 4, 2006; Washington Rob Sanderson Ray Denenberg

  2. SRU Events • Version 1.1 February 2004 • Several Editorial Board Meetings • Implementors Meetings: • June 2005, Chicago • March 2006, The Hague

  3. Results/Decisions

  4. Administrative Name Changes Profiles/Relationships OpenURL OAI OpenSearch Standardization Results/Decisions

  5. Administrative Name Changes Profiles/Relationships OpenURL OAI OpenSearch Standardization Technical Indexes (Context Sets) Proximity Sort Extensions Diagnostics Parameters Results/Decisions

  6. Administrative Name Changes Profiles/Relationships OpenURL OAI OpenSearch Standardization Technical Indexes (Context Sets) Proximity Sort Extensions Diagnostics Parameters (Results/Decisions

  7. Name Changes

  8. SRW • SRU Search Retrieve Web Service Search Retrieve via URL

  9. SRW • SRU • SRU over SOAP Search Retrieve via URL Formerly SRW

  10. Search Retrieve via URL • SRU • SRU over SOAP • SRU POST Formerly SRW new

  11. SRU • SRU over SOAP • SRU Post • CQL Common Query Language

  12. SRU • SRU over SOAP • SRU Post • CQL Common Query Language

  13. SRU • SRU over SOAP • SRU Post • CQL Common Query Language Contextual Query Language

  14. Summary same • SRU • SRU over SOAP • SRU Post • CQL Formerly SRW new Contextual Query Language

  15. Context Sets

  16. What is a Context Set? • For purposes of this discussion: a context set gives context to an index (a search access point); e.g: • dc.title = cat vs. • mods.title = cat

  17. Proposed Context Sets • MODS • MARC • OpenURL

  18. mods • mods.title=“Paradise Lost” • Marc • marc.245$a = “Paradise Lost” • OpenURL • openurl.btitle=“Paradise Lost”

  19. MODS set • For bibliographic searching. • Indexes based on MODS. • MODS used for reference semantics. • But does not presume that the data being searched is MODS. • Analogous to Z39.50 bib-1 and MARC. • Working group to be established.

  20. MARC set • For searching on specific MARC fields, subfields, and substrings. • For users familiar and more comfortable with the MARC format, who prefer to formulate queries using MARC vocabulary.

  21. OpenURL Context Set • A set of indexes corresponding to OpenURL keys, for book, journal, dissertation, patent, etc. • For resolvers: receive an openURL and wish to locate the desired item via SRU.  • not intended for general bibliographic searching.

  22. Proposed Context Sets: Resolution

  23. Proposed Context Sets: Resolution bib set • MODS • MARC • OpenURL profile

  24. Summary • bib • bib.title=“Paradise Lost” • Marc • marc.245$a = “Paradise Lost” • OpenURL Profile

  25. OpenURL Profile

  26. OpenURL Profile • will prescribe a mapping from bibliographic indexes to OpenURL keys.

  27. OpenURL Profile • will prescribe a mapping from bibliographic indexes to OpenURL keys. • Hopefully will be taken on by the bib working group. 

  28. OpenURL Profile • will prescribe a mapping from bibliographic indexes to OpenURL keys. • Hopefully will be taken on by the bib working group.  • may also specify how an SRU response can facilitate the client process of formulating an OpenURL.

  29. OpenURL Scenarios • Scenario 1: • resolver receives OpenURL • wants to formulate an SRU request • Scenario 2: • SRU client receives a record • wants to create an OpenURL

  30. Scenario 2 • SRU client receives a record and wants to create an OpenURL where the object described by that record is to be the referent. • Client requests the record for that item in the appropriate OpenURL schema -- for example: • Books: • http://www.openurl.info/registry/docs/xsd/info:ofi/fmt:xml:xsd:book • Journals • http://www.openurl.info/registry/docs/xsd/info:ofi/fmt:xml:xsd:journal • Then uses that record directly, to formulate an OpenURL request.

  31. SRU Standardization

  32. What to standardize? • How?

  33. What to Standardize: • SRU • CQL • ZeeRex • Scan

  34. SRU: • SRU itself • SRU over SOAP (formerly SRW) • SRU POST • CQL • ZeeRex • Scan

  35. How?

  36. Philosophy

  37. Premise • “The world clearly needs a (single,) well-defined, powerful protocol for searching by URL with results returned in XML.” -- Mike Taylor

  38. The world needs a standard protocol for searching by URL with results returned in XML. • Competing protocols are being developed. • One of these will drive this standardization effort if SRU does not. • And if so, it won’t meet our needs.

  39. And Therefore…. • SRU needs to drive this effort. • It needs to involve the other interested communities. • In conclusion …..

  40. Conclusion • SRU standardization needs to be in a mainstream standards body.

  41. OASIS

  42. OASIS Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards

  43. OASIS • Founded 1993: “SGML Open” • 5,000+ participantsrepresenting • over 600+ organizations • 100 countries • Produces • Web services standards • More than any other organization. • standards for security, e-business, and specific applications.

  44. OASIS • Neutral ground for merging competing de facto standards into an industry standard. • Lightweight process to: • promote industry consensus • unite disparate efforts.

  45. OASIS Cycle • public-list • Technical Committee • Standard

  46. OASIS public-list process • Discuss the formation of an OASIS TC. • Develop a charter.

  47. Technical Committee to Determine: • Is there consensus across communities that a harmonized standard would emerge from an OASIS TC; • -- or • Are there intrinsic, insurmountable differences of opinion? • Would other parties (A9 etc.) participate? • How much change will input from other parties introduce? • How long will it take to get to a committee draft? • The version prior to public comment and a vote of all OASIS members

  48. OASIS Cycle • Public List • About 3 months. • Technical Committee • About 6 months. • Committee Draft to standard • About 3 months.

  49. SRU Cycle • Version 1.2 • formalize the easy changes into SRU version 1.2. • Version 2.0 • Take the more complex problems into the standardization process.

  50. Possible Standardization Sequence • OASIS • Fast Track in NISO • Fast Track in ISO

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