source: other-projects/nightly-tasks/diffcol/trunk/gs3-model-collect/Word-PDF-Formatting/archives/HASH1a9c.dir/doc.xml@ 28143

Last change on this file since 28143 was 28143, checked in by ak19, 11 years ago

Committing the GS3 model collections for the tutorials originally built on Windows up to the 19th of July 2013, but re-built on Linux today. Enhanced-PDF not committed as its PDF to img conversion has issues.

File size: 52.7 KB
Line 
1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="no"?>
2<!DOCTYPE Archive SYSTEM "http://greenstone.org/dtd/Archive/1.0/Archive.dtd">
3<Archive>
4<Section>
5 <Description>
6 <Metadata name="gsdldoctype">indexed_doc</Metadata>
7 <Metadata name="Language">en</Metadata>
8 <Metadata name="Encoding">utf8</Metadata>
9 <Metadata name="Author">Bronwyn</Metadata>
10 <Metadata name="Title">Greenstone: A Comprehensive Open-Source Digital Library Software...</Metadata>
11 <Metadata name="URL">http://research/ak19/gs3-svn-26Aug2013/web/sites/localsite/collect/Word-PDF-Formatting/tmp/1377504502_2/pdf01.html</Metadata>
12 <Metadata name="UTF8URL">http://research/ak19/gs3-svn-26Aug2013/web/sites/localsite/collect/Word-PDF-Formatting/tmp/1377504502_2/pdf01.html</Metadata>
13 <Metadata name="gsdlsourcefilename">import/pdf01.pdf</Metadata>
14 <Metadata name="gsdlconvertedfilename">tmp/1377504502_2/pdf01.html</Metadata>
15 <Metadata name="OrigSource">pdf01.html</Metadata>
16 <Metadata name="Source">pdf01.pdf</Metadata>
17 <Metadata name="SourceFile">pdf01.pdf</Metadata>
18 <Metadata name="Plugin">PDFPlugin</Metadata>
19 <Metadata name="FileSize">269487</Metadata>
20 <Metadata name="FilenameRoot">pdf01</Metadata>
21 <Metadata name="FileFormat">PDF</Metadata>
22 <Metadata name="srcicon">_iconpdf_</Metadata>
23 <Metadata name="srclink_file">doc.pdf</Metadata>
24 <Metadata name="srclinkFile">doc.pdf</Metadata>
25 <Metadata name="NumPages">9</Metadata>
26 <Metadata name="dc.Creator">Ian H. Witten</Metadata>
27 <Metadata name="dc.Creator">Rodger J. McNab</Metadata>
28 <Metadata name="dc.Creator">Stefan J. Boddie</Metadata>
29 <Metadata name="dc.Creator">David Bainbridge</Metadata>
30 <Metadata name="dc.Title">Greenstone: A Comprehensive Open-Source Digital Library Software System</Metadata>
31 <Metadata name="Identifier">HASH1a9cea0f239f754007681b</Metadata>
32 <Metadata name="lastmodified">1377503628</Metadata>
33 <Metadata name="lastmodifieddate">20130826</Metadata>
34 <Metadata name="oailastmodified">1377504502</Metadata>
35 <Metadata name="oailastmodifieddate">20130826</Metadata>
36 <Metadata name="assocfilepath">HASH1a9c.dir</Metadata>
37 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">pdf01-2_1.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
38 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">pdf01-3_1.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
39 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">pdf01-4_1.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
40 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">pdf01-5_1.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
41 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">pdf01-7_1.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
42 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">pdf01-8_1.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
43 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">doc.pdf:application/pdf:</Metadata>
44 </Description>
45 <Content>
46&lt;A name=1&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;b&gt;Greenstone: A Comprehensive Open-Source&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
47&lt;b&gt;Digital Library Software System&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
48&lt;i&gt;Ian H. Witten,* Rodger J. McNab,† Stefan J. Boddie,* David Bainbridge*&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
49* Dept of Computer Science&lt;br&gt;
50† Digilib Systems&lt;br&gt;
51University of Waikato, New Zealand&lt;br&gt;
52Hamilton, New Zealand&lt;br&gt;
53E-mail: {ihw, sjboddie, davidb}@cs.waikato.ac.nz&lt;br&gt;
54E-mail: [email protected]&lt;br&gt;
55&lt;b&gt;ABSTRACT&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
56multilingual information retrieval to distributed computing&lt;br&gt;protocols, from interoperability to search engine&lt;br&gt;
57This paper describes the Greenstone digital library&lt;br&gt;
58technology, from metadata standards to multiformat&lt;br&gt;
59software, a comprehensive, open-source system for the&lt;br&gt;
60document parsing, from multimedia to multiple operating&lt;br&gt;
61construction and presentation of information collections.&lt;br&gt;
62systems, from Web browsers to plug-and-play DVDs.&lt;br&gt;
63Collections built with Greenstone offer effective full-text&lt;br&gt;searching and metadata-based browsing facilities that are&lt;br&gt;
64The Greenstone Digital Library Software from the New&lt;br&gt;
65attractive and easy to use. Moreover, they are easily&lt;br&gt;
66Zealand Digital Library (NZDL) project tackles this issue&lt;br&gt;
67maintainable and can be augmented and rebuilt entirely&lt;br&gt;
68by providing a new way of organizing information and&lt;br&gt;
69automatically. The system is extensible: software&lt;br&gt;
70making it available over the Internet. A &lt;i&gt;collection&lt;/i&gt; of&lt;br&gt;
71“plugins” accommodate different document and metadata&lt;br&gt;
72information comprises several (typically several thousand,&lt;br&gt;
73types.&lt;br&gt;
74or several million) &lt;i&gt;documents&lt;/i&gt;, and a uniform interface is&lt;br&gt;provided to all documents in a collection. A library may&lt;br&gt;
75&lt;b&gt;INTRODUCTION&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
76include many different collections, each organized&lt;br&gt;differently—though there is a strong family resemblance in&lt;br&gt;
77Notwithstanding intense research activity in the digital&lt;br&gt;
78how collections are presented.&lt;br&gt;
79library field during the second half of the 1990s,&lt;br&gt;comprehensive software systems for creating digital&lt;br&gt;
80Making information available using this system is far more&lt;br&gt;
81libraries are not widely available. In fact, the usual solution&lt;br&gt;
82than “just putting it on the Web.” The collection becomes&lt;br&gt;
83when creating a digital library is also the most&lt;br&gt;
84maintainable, searchable, and browsable. Each collection,&lt;br&gt;
85obvious—just put it on the Web. But consider how much&lt;br&gt;
86prior to presentation, undergoes a “building” process that,&lt;br&gt;
87effort is involved in constructing a Web site for a digital&lt;br&gt;
88once established, is completely automatic. This process&lt;br&gt;
89library. To be effective it needs to be visually attractive&lt;br&gt;
90creates all the structures that are used at run-time for&lt;br&gt;
91and ergonomically easy to use, incorporate convenient and&lt;br&gt;
92accessing the collection. Searching is based on various&lt;br&gt;
93powerful searching capabilities, and offer rich and natural&lt;br&gt;
94indexes, while browsing is based on various metadata;&lt;br&gt;
95browsing facilities. Above all it must be easy to maintain&lt;br&gt;
96support structures for both are created during the building&lt;br&gt;
97and augment, which presents a significant challenge if any&lt;br&gt;
98operation. When new material appears it can be fully&lt;br&gt;
99manual organization is involved.&lt;br&gt;
100incorporated into the collection by rebuilding.&lt;br&gt;
101The alternative is to automate these activities through&lt;br&gt;
102To address the exceptionally broad demands of digital&lt;br&gt;
103software tools. But the broad scope of digital library&lt;br&gt;
104libraries, the system is public and extensible. It is issued&lt;br&gt;
105requirements makes this a daunting prospect. Ideally the&lt;br&gt;
106under the Gnu public license and, in the spirit of open-&lt;br&gt;
107software should incorporate facilities ranging from&lt;br&gt;
108source software, users are invited to contribute&lt;br&gt;modifications and enhancements. Only through an&lt;br&gt;international cooperative effort will digital library software&lt;br&gt;become sufficiently comprehensive to meet the world’s&lt;br&gt;needs. Currently the Greenstone software is used at sites in&lt;br&gt;Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Romania, UK, and the&lt;br&gt;US, and collections range from newspaper articles to&lt;br&gt;technical documents, from educational journals to oral&lt;br&gt;history, from visual art to folksongs. The software has&lt;br&gt;been used for collections in many different languages, and&lt;br&gt;for CD-ROMs that have been published by the United&lt;br&gt;Nations and other humanitarian agencies in Belgium,&lt;br&gt;France, Japan, and the US for distribution in developing&lt;br&gt;countries (Humanity Libraries, 1998; PAHO, 1999;&lt;br&gt;UNESCO, 1999; UNU, 1998). Further details can be&lt;br&gt;obtained from &lt;i&gt;www.nzdl.org&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;br&gt;
109&lt;hr&gt;
110&lt;A name=2&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;IMG src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/pdf01-2_1.jpg&quot;&gt;&lt;br&gt;
111become a first-class component of the library. And what&lt;br&gt;permits it to be integrated into existing searching and&lt;br&gt;browsing structures without any manual intervention is&lt;br&gt;&lt;i&gt;metadata&lt;/i&gt;. This provides sufficient focus to the concept of&lt;br&gt;“digital library” to support the development of a&lt;br&gt;construction kit.&lt;br&gt;
112&lt;b&gt;OVERVIEW OF GREENSTONE&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
113 &lt;br&gt;Information collections built by Greenstone combine&lt;br&gt;extensive full-text search facilities with browsing indexes&lt;br&gt;based on different metadata types. There are several ways&lt;br&gt;for users to find information, although they differ between&lt;br&gt;collections depending on the metadata available and the&lt;br&gt;collection design. Typically you can &lt;i&gt;search for particular&lt;br&gt;words&lt;/i&gt; that appear in the text, or within a section of a&lt;br&gt;document, or within a title or section heading. You can&lt;br&gt;&lt;i&gt;browse documents by title&lt;/i&gt;: just click on the displayed book&lt;br&gt;icon to read it. You can &lt;i&gt;browse documents by subject&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;br&gt;Subjects are represented by bookshelves: just click on a&lt;br&gt;shelf to see the books. Where appropriate, documents&lt;br&gt;
114&lt;b&gt;Figure 1: Searching the HDL collection&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
115come complete with a table of contents (constructed&lt;br&gt;automatically): you can click on a chapter or subsection to&lt;br&gt;
116This paper sets the scene with a brief discussion of what a&lt;br&gt;
117open it, expand the full table of contents, or expand the full&lt;br&gt;
118digital library is. We then give an overview of the facilities&lt;br&gt;
119document.&lt;br&gt;
120offered by Greenstone and show how end users find&lt;br&gt;information in collections. Next we describe the files and&lt;br&gt;
121 &lt;br&gt;An example of searching is shown in Figure 1 where&lt;br&gt;
122directories involved in a collection, and then discuss the&lt;br&gt;
123documents in the Global Help Project’s Humanity&lt;br&gt;
124processes of updating existing collections and creating new&lt;br&gt;
125Development Library (HDL) are being searched for&lt;br&gt;
126ones, including extending the software to provide new&lt;br&gt;
127chapters matching the word &lt;i&gt;butterfly&lt;/i&gt;. In Figure 2 the same&lt;br&gt;
128facilities. We conclude with an overview of related work.&lt;br&gt;
129collection is being browsed by subject: by clicking on the&lt;br&gt;bookshelf icons the user has discovered an item under&lt;br&gt;
130&lt;b&gt;WHAT IS A DIGITAL LIBRARY?&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
131Section 16, Animal Husbandry. Pursuing an interest in&lt;br&gt;butterfly farming, the user selects a book by clicking on its&lt;br&gt;
132 &lt;br&gt;Ten definitions of the term “digital library” have been&lt;br&gt;
133book icon. In Figure 3 the front cover of the book is&lt;br&gt;
134culled from the literature by Fox (1998), and their spirit is&lt;br&gt;
135displayed as a graphic on the left, and the automatically&lt;br&gt;
136captured in the following brief characterization:&lt;br&gt;
137constructed table of contents appears at the start of the&lt;br&gt;
138 &lt;br&gt;
139document. The current focus, &lt;i&gt;Introduction and Summary&lt;/i&gt;,&lt;br&gt;
140&lt;i&gt;A collection of digital objects, including text,&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
141is shown in bold in the table of contents with its text&lt;br&gt;
142&lt;i&gt;video, and audio, along with methods for access&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
143starting further down the page.&lt;br&gt;
144&lt;i&gt;and retrieval, and for selection, organization&lt;br&gt;and maintenance of the collection&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
145 &lt;br&gt;In accordance with Lesk’s advice, a statement of purpose&lt;br&gt;
146 &lt;br&gt;
147and coverage accompanies each collection, along with an&lt;br&gt;
148(Akscyn and Witten, 1998). Lesk (1998) views digital&lt;br&gt;
149explanation of how it is organized (Figure 1 shows the&lt;br&gt;
150libraries as “organized collections of digital information,”&lt;br&gt;
151start of this). A distinction is made between &lt;i&gt;searching&lt;/i&gt; and&lt;br&gt;
152and wisely recommends that they articulate the principles&lt;br&gt;
153&lt;i&gt;browsing&lt;/i&gt;. Searching is full-text, and—depending on the&lt;br&gt;
154governing what is included and how the collection is&lt;br&gt;
155collection’s design—the user can choose between indexes&lt;br&gt;
156organized.&lt;br&gt;
157built from different parts of the documents, or from&lt;br&gt;
158 &lt;br&gt;Digital libraries are generally distinguished from the&lt;br&gt;
159different metadata. Some collections have an index of full&lt;br&gt;
160World-Wide Web, the essential difference being in&lt;br&gt;
161documents, an index of sections, an index of paragraphs,&lt;br&gt;
162selection and organization. But they are not generally&lt;br&gt;
163an index of titles, and an index of section headings, each of&lt;br&gt;
164distinguished from a web &lt;i&gt;site&lt;/i&gt;: indeed, virtually all extant&lt;br&gt;
165which can be searched for particular words or phrases.&lt;br&gt;
166digital libraries manifest themselves as a web site. Hence&lt;br&gt;
167Browsing involves data structures created from metadata&lt;br&gt;
168the obvious question: to make a digital library, why not&lt;br&gt;
169that the user can examine: lists of authors, lists of titles,&lt;br&gt;
170just put the information on the Web?&lt;br&gt;
171lists of dates, hierarchical classification structures, and so&lt;br&gt;
172 &lt;br&gt;
173on. Data structures for both browsing and searching are&lt;br&gt;
174But we make a distinction between a digital library and a&lt;br&gt;
175built according to instructions in a configuration file,&lt;br&gt;
176web site that lies at the heart of our software design: one&lt;br&gt;
177which controls both building and serving the collection.&lt;br&gt;
178should easily be able to add new material to a library&lt;br&gt;
179Sample configuration files are discussed below.&lt;br&gt;
180without having to integrate it manually or edit its content&lt;br&gt;in any way. Once added, new material should immediately&lt;br&gt;
181&lt;hr&gt;
182&lt;A name=3&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;IMG src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/pdf01-3_1.jpg&quot;&gt;&lt;br&gt;
183matter of specifying all the necessary plugins. In order to&lt;br&gt;build browsing indexes from metadata, an analogous&lt;br&gt;scheme of “classifiers” is used: classifiers create indexes&lt;br&gt;of various kinds based on metadata. Source documents are&lt;br&gt;brought into the Greenstone system through a process&lt;br&gt;called &lt;i&gt;importing&lt;/i&gt;, which uses the plugins and classifiers&lt;br&gt;specified in the collection configuration file.&lt;br&gt;
184 &lt;br&gt;The international Unicode character set is used throughout,&lt;br&gt;so documents—and interfaces—can be written in any&lt;br&gt;language. Collections have so far been produced in&lt;br&gt;English, French, Spanish, German, Maori, Chinese, and&lt;br&gt;Arabic. The NZDL Web site provides numerous examples.&lt;br&gt;Collections can contain text, pictures, and even audio and&lt;br&gt;video clips; a text-only version of the interface is also&lt;br&gt;provided to accommodate visually impaired users.&lt;br&gt;Compression technology is used to ensure best use of&lt;br&gt;storage (Witten &lt;i&gt;et al &lt;/i&gt;., 1999). Most non-textual material is&lt;br&gt;either linked to textual documents or accompanied by&lt;br&gt;textual descriptions (such as photo captions) to allow full-&lt;br&gt;text searching and browsing. However, the architecture&lt;br&gt;
185&lt;b&gt;Figure 2: Browsing the HDL collection by subject&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
186permits the implementation of plugins and classifiers even&lt;br&gt;for non-textual data.&lt;br&gt;
187 &lt;br&gt;Rich browsing facilities can be provided by manually&lt;br&gt;
188 &lt;br&gt;
189linking parts of documents together and building explicit&lt;br&gt;
190The system includes an “administrative” function whereby&lt;br&gt;
191indexes and tables of contents. However, manually-created&lt;br&gt;
192specified users can examine the composition of all&lt;br&gt;
193linking becomes difficult to maintain, and often falls into&lt;br&gt;
194collections, protect documents so that they can only be&lt;br&gt;
195disrepair when a collection expands. The Greenstone&lt;br&gt;
196accessed by registered users on presentation of a password,&lt;br&gt;
197software takes a different tack: it facilitates &lt;i&gt;maintainability&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
198and so on. Logs of user activity are kept that record all&lt;br&gt;
199by creating all searching and browsing structures&lt;br&gt;
200queries made to every Greenstone collection (though this&lt;br&gt;
201automatically from the documents themselves. No links&lt;br&gt;
202facility can be disabled).&lt;br&gt;
203are inserted by hand. This means that when new&lt;br&gt;
204 &lt;br&gt;Although primarily designed for Internet access over the&lt;br&gt;
205documents in the same format become available, they can&lt;br&gt;
206World-Wide Web, collections can be made available, in&lt;br&gt;
207be added automatically. Indeed, for some collections this is&lt;br&gt;
208precisely the same form, on CD-ROM. In either case they&lt;br&gt;
209done by processes that wake up regularly, scout for new&lt;br&gt;
210are accessed through any Web browser. Greenstone CD-&lt;br&gt;
211material, and rebuild the indexes—all without manual&lt;br&gt;
212ROMs operate on a standalone PC under Windows 3.X,&lt;br&gt;
213intervention.&lt;br&gt;
21495, 98, and NT, and the interaction is identical to accessing&lt;br&gt;
215Collections comprise many documents: thousands, tens of&lt;br&gt;
216the collection on the Web—except that response is faster&lt;br&gt;
217thousands, or even millions. Each document may be&lt;br&gt;
218and more predictable. The requirement to operate on early&lt;br&gt;
219hierarchically organized into &lt;i&gt;sections&lt;/i&gt; (subsections, sub-&lt;br&gt;
220Windows systems is one that plagues the software design,&lt;br&gt;
221subsections, and so on). Each section comprises one or&lt;br&gt;
222but is crucial for many users—particularly those in&lt;br&gt;
223more &lt;i&gt;paragraphs&lt;/i&gt;. Metadata such as author, title, date,&lt;br&gt;
224underdeveloped countries seeking access to humanitarian&lt;br&gt;
225keywords, and so on, may be associated with documents,&lt;br&gt;
226aid collections. If the PC is connected to a network&lt;br&gt;
227or with individual sections of documents. This is the raw&lt;br&gt;
228(intranet or Internet), a custom-built Web server provided&lt;br&gt;
229material for indexes. It must either be provided explicitly&lt;br&gt;
230on each CD makes exactly the same information available&lt;br&gt;
231for each document and section (for example, in an&lt;br&gt;
232to others through their standard Web browser. The use of&lt;br&gt;
233accompanying spreadsheet) or be derivable automatically&lt;br&gt;
234compression ensures that the greatest possible volume of&lt;br&gt;
235from the source documents. Metadata is converted to&lt;br&gt;
236information can be packed on to a CD-ROM.&lt;br&gt;
237Dublin Core and stored with the document for internal use.&lt;br&gt;
238 &lt;br&gt;The collection-serving software operates under Unix and&lt;br&gt;
239 &lt;br&gt;In order to accommodate different kinds of source&lt;br&gt;
240Windows NT, and works with standard Web servers. A&lt;br&gt;
241documents, the software is organized so that “plugins” can&lt;br&gt;
242flexible process structure allows different collections to be&lt;br&gt;
243be written for new document types. Plugins exist for plain&lt;br&gt;
244served by different computers, yet be presented to the user&lt;br&gt;
245text documents, HTML documents, email documents, and&lt;br&gt;
246in the same way, on the same Web page, as part of the&lt;br&gt;
247bibliographic formats. Word documents are handled by&lt;br&gt;
248same digital library, even as part of the same collection&lt;br&gt;
249saving them as HTML; PostScript ones by applying a&lt;br&gt;
250(McNab and Witten, 1998). Existing collections can be&lt;br&gt;
251preprocessor (Nevill-Manning &lt;i&gt;et al&lt;/i&gt;., 1998). Specially&lt;br&gt;
252updated and new ones brought on-line at any time, without&lt;br&gt;
253written plugins also exist for proprietary formats such as&lt;br&gt;
254bringing the system down; the process responsible for the&lt;br&gt;
255that used by the BBC archives department. A collection&lt;br&gt;
256user interface will notice (through periodic polling) when&lt;br&gt;
257may have source documents in different forms: it is just a&lt;br&gt;
258new collections appear and add them to the list presented&lt;br&gt;to the user.&lt;br&gt;
259&lt;hr&gt;
260&lt;A name=4&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;IMG src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/pdf01-4_1.jpg&quot;&gt;&lt;br&gt;
261&lt;b&gt;FILES IN A COLLECTION&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
262 &lt;br&gt;When a new collection is created or material is added to an&lt;br&gt;existing one, the original source documents are first&lt;br&gt;brought into the system through a process known as&lt;br&gt;“importing.” This involves converting documents into a&lt;br&gt;simple HTML-like format known as GML (for&lt;br&gt;“Greenstone Markup Language”), which includes any&lt;br&gt;metadata associated with the document. Documents are&lt;br&gt;assumed to be in the Unicode UTF-8 code (of which the&lt;br&gt;ASCII characters form a subset).&lt;br&gt;
263 &lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;Files and directories&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
264 &lt;br&gt;There is a separate directory for each collection, which&lt;br&gt;contains five subdirectories: the original raw material&lt;br&gt;(&lt;i&gt;import&lt;/i&gt;), the GML files created from this (&lt;i&gt;archives&lt;/i&gt;), the&lt;br&gt;final collection as it is served to users (&lt;i&gt;index&lt;/i&gt;), a directory&lt;br&gt;for use during the building process (&lt;i&gt;building&lt;/i&gt;), and one for&lt;br&gt;any supporting files (&lt;i&gt;etc&lt;/i&gt;)—including the configuration file&lt;br&gt;
265&lt;b&gt;Figure 3: Reading a book in the HDL&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
266that controls the collection creation procedure. Additional&lt;br&gt;files might be required: for example, building a hierarchy&lt;br&gt;of classifications requires a data file of sub-classifications.&lt;br&gt;
267&lt;b&gt;FINDING INFORMATION&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
268 &lt;br&gt;Greenstone digital library systems generally include&lt;br&gt;
269 &lt;br&gt;
270several separate collections. A home page allows you to&lt;br&gt;
271&lt;b&gt;The imported documents&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
272select a collection; in addition, each collection has its own&lt;br&gt;
273 &lt;br&gt;In order to identify documents internally, a unique object&lt;br&gt;
274“about” page that gives you information about how the&lt;br&gt;
275identifier or OID is assigned to each original source&lt;br&gt;
276collection is organized and the principles governing what&lt;br&gt;
277document when it is imported (formed by hashing the&lt;br&gt;
278is included.&lt;br&gt;
279content, to overcome file duplication effects caused by&lt;br&gt;
280 &lt;br&gt;All icons in the screenshots of Figures 1–4 are clickable.&lt;br&gt;
281mirroring) and stored as metadata within that document. It&lt;br&gt;
282Those icons at the top of the page return to the home page,&lt;br&gt;
283is important that OIDs persist throughout the index-&lt;br&gt;
284provide help text, and allow you to set user interface and&lt;br&gt;
285building process—so that a user’s search history is&lt;br&gt;
286searching preferences. The navigation bar underneath&lt;br&gt;
287unaffected by rebuilding the collection. OIDs are assigned&lt;br&gt;
288gives access to the searching and browsing facilities,&lt;br&gt;
289by hashing the contents of the original source document.&lt;br&gt;
290which differ from one collection to another.&lt;br&gt;
291 &lt;br&gt;Once imported, each document is stored in its own&lt;br&gt;
292 &lt;br&gt;Each of the five buttons provides a different way to find&lt;br&gt;
293subdirectory of &lt;i&gt;archives&lt;/i&gt;, along with any associated&lt;br&gt;
294information. You can &lt;i&gt;search for particular words&lt;/i&gt; that&lt;br&gt;
295files—for example, images. To ensure compatibility with&lt;br&gt;
296appear in the text from the “search” page (or from the&lt;br&gt;
297Windows 3.0, only eight characters are used in directory&lt;br&gt;
298“about” page of Figure 1). This collection contains indexes&lt;br&gt;
299and file names, which causes annoying but essentially&lt;br&gt;
300of chapters, section titles, and entire books. The default&lt;br&gt;
301trivial complications.&lt;br&gt;
302search interface is a simple one, suitable for casual users;&lt;br&gt;advanced searching—which allows full Boolean&lt;br&gt;
303 &lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;Inside the documents&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
304expressions, phrase searching, case and stemming&lt;br&gt;control—can be enabled from the &lt;i&gt;Preferences&lt;/i&gt; page.&lt;br&gt;
305 &lt;br&gt;The GML format imposes a limited amount of structure on&lt;br&gt;
306 &lt;br&gt;
307documents. Documents are divided into paragraphs. They&lt;br&gt;
308This collection has four browsable metadata indexes. You&lt;br&gt;
309can be split hierarchically into sections and subsections.&lt;br&gt;
310can &lt;i&gt;access publications by subject&lt;/i&gt; by clicking the &lt;i&gt;subjects&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
311OIDs are extended to identify these components by&lt;br&gt;
312button, which brings up a list of subjects, represented by&lt;br&gt;
313appending numbers, separated by periods, to a document’s&lt;br&gt;
314bookshelves (Figure 2). You can &lt;i&gt;access publications by&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
315OID. When a book is read, its section hierarchy is visible&lt;br&gt;
316&lt;i&gt;title&lt;/i&gt; by clicking &lt;i&gt;titles a-z&lt;/i&gt; (Figure 4), which brings up a list&lt;br&gt;
317as the table of contents (Figure 3). Chapters, sections,&lt;br&gt;
318of books in alphabetic order. You can &lt;i&gt;access publications&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
319subsections, and pages are all implemented simply as&lt;br&gt;
320&lt;i&gt;by organization&lt;/i&gt; (i.e. Dublin Core “publisher”), bringing up&lt;br&gt;
321“sections” within the document. In some collections&lt;br&gt;
322a list of organizations. You can &lt;i&gt;access publications by&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
323documents do not have a hierarchical subsection structure,&lt;br&gt;
324&lt;i&gt;“how to” listing&lt;/i&gt;, yielding a list of hints defined by the&lt;br&gt;
325but are split into pages to permit browsing within a&lt;br&gt;
326collection’s editors. We use the Dublin Core as a base and&lt;br&gt;
327retrieved document.&lt;br&gt;
328extend it in an &lt;i&gt;ad hoc&lt;/i&gt; manner to accommodate the&lt;br&gt;individual requirements of collection designers.&lt;br&gt;
329 &lt;br&gt;The document structure is used for searchable indexes.&lt;br&gt;There are three levels of index: &lt;i&gt;documents&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;sections&lt;/i&gt;, and&lt;br&gt;
330&lt;hr&gt;
331&lt;A name=5&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;IMG src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/pdf01-5_1.jpg&quot;&gt;&lt;br&gt;
332the &lt;i&gt;import&lt;/i&gt; process is invoked, which converts the files into&lt;br&gt;GML using the specified plugins. Old material for which&lt;br&gt;GML files have previously been created is not re-imported.&lt;br&gt;Then the &lt;i&gt;build&lt;/i&gt; process is invoked to build the requisite&lt;br&gt;indexes for the collection. Finally, the contents of the&lt;br&gt;&lt;i&gt;building&lt;/i&gt; directory are moved into the &lt;i&gt;index&lt;/i&gt; directory, and&lt;br&gt;the new version of the collection automatically becomes&lt;br&gt;live.&lt;br&gt;
333 &lt;br&gt;This procedure may seem cumbersome. But all the steps&lt;br&gt;are necessary for efficient operation with large collections.&lt;br&gt;The &lt;i&gt;import&lt;/i&gt; process could be performed on the fly during&lt;br&gt;the building operation—but because building indexes is a&lt;br&gt;multipass operation, the often lengthy importing would be&lt;br&gt;repeated several times. The &lt;i&gt;build&lt;/i&gt; process can take&lt;br&gt;considerable time—a day or two, for very large&lt;br&gt;collections. Consequently, the results are placed in the&lt;br&gt;&lt;i&gt;building&lt;/i&gt; directory so that, if the collection already exists, it&lt;br&gt;will continue to be served to users in its old form&lt;br&gt;throughout the building operation.&lt;br&gt;
334 &lt;br&gt;Active users of the collection will not be disturbed when&lt;br&gt;the new version becomes live—they will probably not&lt;br&gt;
335&lt;b&gt;Figure 4: Browsing titles in the HDL&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
336even notice. The persistent OIDs ensure that interactions&lt;br&gt;remain coherent—users who are examining the results of a&lt;br&gt;query or browse operation will still retrieve the expected&lt;br&gt;
337&lt;i&gt;paragraphs&lt;/i&gt;, corresponding to the distinctions that GML&lt;br&gt;
338documents—and if a search is actually in progress when&lt;br&gt;
339makes—the hierarchical structure is flattened for the&lt;br&gt;
340the change takes place the program detects the resulting&lt;br&gt;
341purposes of creating these indexes. Indexes can be of text,&lt;br&gt;
342file-structure inconsistency and automatically and&lt;br&gt;
343or metadata, or any combination. Thus you can create a&lt;br&gt;
344transparently re-executes the query, this time on the new&lt;br&gt;
345searchable index of section titles, and/or authors, and/or&lt;br&gt;
346version of the collection.&lt;br&gt;
347document descriptions, as well as the document text.&lt;br&gt;
348&lt;b&gt;UPDATING EXISTING COLLECTIONS&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
349 &lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;How it works&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
350 &lt;br&gt;Updating an existing collection with new files in the same&lt;br&gt;
351 &lt;br&gt;The original material in the &lt;i&gt;import&lt;/i&gt; directory may be in any&lt;br&gt;
352format is easy. For example, the raw material for the HDL&lt;br&gt;
353format, and plugins are required to process each format&lt;br&gt;
354is supplied in the form of HTML files marked up with&lt;br&gt;
355type. The plugins that a collection uses must be specified&lt;br&gt;
356&amp;lt;&amp;lt;TOC&amp;gt;&amp;gt; tags to split books into sections and&lt;br&gt;
357in the collection configuration file. The &lt;i&gt;import&lt;/i&gt; program&lt;br&gt;
358subsections, and &amp;lt;&amp;lt;I&amp;gt;&amp;gt; tags to indicate where an image is&lt;br&gt;
359reads the list of plugins and passes each document to each&lt;br&gt;
360to be inserted. For each book in the library there is a&lt;br&gt;
361plugin in order until it finds one that can process it. When&lt;br&gt;
362directory that contains a single HTML file representing the&lt;br&gt;
363updating an existing collection, all plugins necessary to&lt;br&gt;
364book, and separate files containing the associated images.&lt;br&gt;
365process new material should already have been specified in&lt;br&gt;
366An accompanying spreadsheet file contains the&lt;br&gt;
367the configuration file.&lt;br&gt;
368classification hierarchy; this is converted to a simple file&lt;br&gt;format (using Excel’s &lt;i&gt;Save As&lt;/i&gt; command).&lt;br&gt;
369 &lt;br&gt;The building step creates the indexes for both searching&lt;br&gt;and browsing. The MG software is generally used to do the&lt;br&gt;
370 &lt;br&gt;Since the collection exists, its directory is already set up&lt;br&gt;
371searching (Witten &lt;i&gt;et al.&lt;/i&gt;, 1999), and the &lt;i&gt;mgbuild&lt;/i&gt; module is&lt;br&gt;
372with subdirectories &lt;i&gt;import&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;archives&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;building&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;index&lt;/i&gt;, and&lt;br&gt;
373automatically invoked to create each of the indexes that is&lt;br&gt;
374&lt;i&gt;etc&lt;/i&gt;, and the &lt;i&gt;etc&lt;/i&gt; directory will contain a suitable collection&lt;br&gt;
375required. For example, the Humanity Development Library&lt;br&gt;
376configuration file.&lt;br&gt;
377has three indexes, one for entire books, one for chapters,&lt;br&gt;and one for section titles. Subdirectories of the &lt;i&gt;index&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
378 &lt;br&gt;
379directory are created for each of these indexes.&lt;br&gt;
380&lt;b&gt;The updating procedure&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
381 &lt;br&gt;To update a collection, the new raw material is placed in&lt;br&gt;the &lt;i&gt;import&lt;/i&gt; directory, in whatever form it is available. Then&lt;br&gt;
382&lt;hr&gt;
383&lt;A name=6&gt;&lt;/a&gt;creator&lt;br&gt;
384[email protected]&lt;br&gt;
3851&lt;br&gt;
386maintainer&lt;br&gt;
387[email protected]&lt;br&gt;
3882&lt;br&gt;
389public&lt;br&gt;
390True&lt;br&gt;
3913&lt;br&gt;4&lt;br&gt;
392indexes&lt;br&gt;
393document:text&lt;br&gt;
3945&lt;br&gt;
395defaultindex&lt;br&gt;
396document:text&lt;br&gt;
3976&lt;br&gt;
398plugins&lt;br&gt;
399GMLPlug TEXTPlug ArcPlug RecPlug&lt;br&gt;
4007&lt;br&gt;8&lt;br&gt;
401classify&lt;br&gt;
402AZList metadata=Title&lt;br&gt;
4039&lt;br&gt;10&lt;br&gt;
404collectionmeta&lt;br&gt;
405collectionname &amp;quot;generic text collection&amp;quot;&lt;br&gt;
40611&lt;br&gt;
407(a)&lt;br&gt;
408collectionmeta&lt;br&gt;
409.document:text &amp;quot;documents&amp;quot;&lt;br&gt;
41012&lt;br&gt;
411creator&lt;br&gt;
412[email protected]&lt;br&gt;
4131&lt;br&gt;
414maintainer&lt;br&gt;
415[email protected]&lt;br&gt;
4162&lt;br&gt;
417public&lt;br&gt;
418True&lt;br&gt;
4193&lt;br&gt;4&lt;br&gt;
420indexes&lt;br&gt;
421document:text document:From&lt;br&gt;
4225&lt;br&gt;
423defaultindex&lt;br&gt;
424document:text&lt;br&gt;
4256&lt;br&gt;
426plugins&lt;br&gt;
427GMLPlug EMAILPlug ArcPlug RecPlug&lt;br&gt;
4287&lt;br&gt;8&lt;br&gt;
429classify&lt;br&gt;
430AZList metadata=Title&lt;br&gt;
4319&lt;br&gt;
432classify&lt;br&gt;
433DateList&lt;br&gt;
43410&lt;br&gt;11&lt;br&gt;
435collectionmeta&lt;br&gt;
436collectionname &amp;quot;Email messages&amp;quot;&lt;br&gt;
43712&lt;br&gt;
438collectionmeta&lt;br&gt;
439.document:text &amp;quot;documents&amp;quot;&lt;br&gt;
44013&lt;br&gt;
441collectionmeta&lt;br&gt;
442.document:From &amp;quot;email senders&amp;quot;&lt;br&gt;
44314&lt;br&gt;15&lt;br&gt;
444format&lt;br&gt;
445QueryResults \\\\&lt;br&gt;
44616&lt;br&gt;
447(b)&lt;br&gt;
448&amp;lt;td&amp;gt;[link][icon][/link]&amp;lt;/td&amp;gt;&amp;lt;td&amp;gt;[Title]&amp;lt;/td&amp;gt;&amp;lt;td&amp;gt;[Author]&amp;lt;/td&amp;gt;&lt;br&gt;
44917&lt;br&gt;
450&lt;b&gt;Figure 5: Collection configuration files (a) generic, (b) for an email collection&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
451 &lt;br&gt;MG also compresses the text of the collection; and the&lt;br&gt;
452certain circumstances, however, it might be preferable to&lt;br&gt;
453image files are linked into the &lt;i&gt;index&lt;/i&gt; subdirectory. Now&lt;br&gt;
454use a standardized format such as XML. This is&lt;br&gt;
455none of the material in the &lt;i&gt;import&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;archives&lt;/i&gt; directories&lt;br&gt;
456straightforward to implementjust write an XML&lt;br&gt;
457is needed to run the collection and can be removed from&lt;br&gt;
458pluginalthough we have not done so ourselves. Given&lt;br&gt;
459the file system (though they would be needed if the&lt;br&gt;
460the transitory nature of the imported data, to date, we have&lt;br&gt;
461collection were rebuilt).&lt;br&gt;
462found GML a satisfactory and beneficial format.&lt;br&gt;
463 &lt;br&gt;Associated with each collection is a database stored in&lt;br&gt;
464&lt;b&gt;CREATING NEW COLLECTIONS&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
465GDBM (Gnu database manager) format. This contains an&lt;br&gt;entry for each document, giving its OID, its internal MG&lt;br&gt;
466 &lt;br&gt;Building new collections from scratch is only slightly&lt;br&gt;
467document number, and metadata such as title. Information&lt;br&gt;
468different from updating an existing collection. The key&lt;br&gt;
469for each of the browsing indexes, which appear as buttons&lt;br&gt;
470new requirement is creating a collection configuration file,&lt;br&gt;
471on the Greenstone search/browse bar, is also extracted&lt;br&gt;
472and a software utility is provided to help. Two pieces of&lt;br&gt;
473during the building process and stored in the database. A&lt;br&gt;
474information are required for this: the name of the directory&lt;br&gt;
475“classifier” program is required for each browsing index to&lt;br&gt;
476that the collection will use (into which the source data and&lt;br&gt;
477extract the appropriate information from GML documents.&lt;br&gt;
478other files will eventually be placed), and a contact e-mail&lt;br&gt;
479Like plugins, classifiers are written on an &lt;i&gt;ad hoc&lt;/i&gt; basis for&lt;br&gt;
480address for use if any problems are encountered by the&lt;br&gt;
481the particular information required, and where possible&lt;br&gt;
482software once the collection is up and running. The utility&lt;br&gt;
483reused from one collection to another.&lt;br&gt;
484creates files and directories within the newly-named&lt;br&gt;
485 &lt;br&gt;
486directory to support a generic collection of plain text&lt;br&gt;
487The building program creates the indexes based on&lt;br&gt;
488documents. With suitable data placed in the &lt;i&gt;import&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
489whatever appears in the &lt;i&gt;archives&lt;/i&gt; directory. The first plugin&lt;br&gt;
490directory, building the collection at this point will yield a&lt;br&gt;
491specified by all collections is one that processes GML&lt;br&gt;
492document-level searchable index of all the text and a&lt;br&gt;
493files, and so if &lt;i&gt;archives&lt;/i&gt; contains imported files they will be&lt;br&gt;
494browsable list of “titles” (defined in this case to be the&lt;br&gt;
495processed correctly. If it contains material in the original&lt;br&gt;
496document filenames).&lt;br&gt;
497format, that will be converted using the appropriate plugin.&lt;br&gt;Thus the import process is optional.&lt;br&gt;
498 &lt;br&gt;To enhance the functionality and presentation— something&lt;br&gt;
499 &lt;br&gt;
500anything but the most trivial collection will require—the&lt;br&gt;
501GML is designed to be fast and easy to parse, an important&lt;br&gt;
502configuration file must be edited. For a collection sourced&lt;br&gt;
503requirement when millions of documents are to be&lt;br&gt;
504from documents in an already supported data format,&lt;br&gt;
505processed. Something as simple as requiring tags to be&lt;br&gt;
506presented in a similar fashion to an existing collection, the&lt;br&gt;
507lower-case, for example, yields a substantial speed-up. In&lt;br&gt;
508&lt;hr&gt;
509&lt;A name=7&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;IMG src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/pdf01-7_1.jpg&quot;&gt;&lt;br&gt;
510 &lt;br&gt;These are modules of code that can be slotted into the&lt;br&gt;system to enhance its capabilities. Plugins parse&lt;br&gt;documents, extracting the text and metadata to be indexed.&lt;br&gt;Classifiers control how metadata is brought together to&lt;br&gt;form browsable data structures. Both are specified in an&lt;br&gt;object-oriented framework using inheritance to minimize&lt;br&gt;the amount of code written.&lt;br&gt;
511 &lt;br&gt;A plugin must specify three things: what file formats it can&lt;br&gt;handle, how they should be parsed, and whether the plugin&lt;br&gt;is recursive. File formats are normally determined using&lt;br&gt;regular expression matching on the filename. For example,&lt;br&gt;the HTML plugin accepts all files that end in &lt;i&gt;.htm&lt;/i&gt;, . &lt;i&gt;html&lt;/i&gt;,&lt;br&gt;&lt;i&gt;.HTM&lt;/i&gt;, or &lt;i&gt;.HTML&lt;/i&gt;. (It is quite possible, however, to write&lt;br&gt;plugins that “look inside” the file as well.) For other files,&lt;br&gt;the plugin returns &lt;i&gt;undefined&lt;/i&gt; and the file is passed to the&lt;br&gt;next plugin in the collection’s configuration file (e.g.&lt;br&gt;Figure 5 line 7). If it can, the plugin parses the file and&lt;br&gt;returns the number of documents processed. This involves&lt;br&gt;extracting text and metadata and adding it to the library’s&lt;br&gt;content through calls to &lt;i&gt;add text&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;add metadata&lt;/i&gt;.&lt;br&gt;
512 &lt;br&gt;Some plugins (“recursive” ones) add extra files into the&lt;br&gt;
513&lt;b&gt;Figure 6: Searching bookmarked Web pages&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
514stream of data processed during the building phase by&lt;br&gt;artificially reactivating the list of plugins. This is how&lt;br&gt;directory hierarchies are traversed.&lt;br&gt;
515amount of editing is minimal. Importing new data formats&lt;br&gt;and browsing metadata in ways not currently supported are&lt;br&gt;
516 &lt;br&gt;Plugins are small modules of code that are easy to write.&lt;br&gt;
517more complex activities that require programming skills.&lt;br&gt;
518We monitored the time it took to develop a new one that&lt;br&gt;was different to any we had produced so far. We chose to&lt;br&gt;make as an example a collection of HTML bookmark files,&lt;br&gt;
519 &lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;Modifying the configuration file&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
520the motivation being to produce a convenient way of&lt;br&gt;
521 &lt;br&gt;
522searching and browsing one’s bookmarked Web pages.&lt;br&gt;
523Figure 5b shows simple alterations to the generic&lt;br&gt;
524Figure 6 shows a user searching for bookmarked pages&lt;br&gt;
525configuration file in Figure 5a that was generated by the&lt;br&gt;
526about &lt;i&gt;music&lt;/i&gt;. The new plugin took under an hour to write,&lt;br&gt;
527new-collection utility. &lt;i&gt;TEXTPlug&lt;/i&gt; is replaced with&lt;br&gt;
528and was 160 lines long (ignoring blank lines and&lt;br&gt;
529&lt;i&gt;EMAILPlug&lt;/i&gt; (line 7) which reads email files and extracts&lt;br&gt;
530comments)—about the average length of existing plugins.&lt;br&gt;
531metadata (&lt;i&gt;From&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;To&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Date&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;Subject&lt;/i&gt;) from them. A classifier&lt;br&gt;for dates is added (line 10) to make the collection&lt;br&gt;
532 &lt;br&gt;Classifiers are more general than plugins because they&lt;br&gt;
533browsable chronologically. The default presentation of&lt;br&gt;
534work on GML-format data. For example, any plugin that&lt;br&gt;
535search results is overridden (line 17) to display both the&lt;br&gt;
536generates date metadata in accordance with the Dublin&lt;br&gt;
537title of the message (i.e. Dublin Core &lt;i&gt;Title&lt;/i&gt;) and its sender&lt;br&gt;
538core can request the collection to be browsable&lt;br&gt;
539(i.e. Dublin Core &lt;i&gt;Author&lt;/i&gt;). Elements in square brackets,&lt;br&gt;
540chronologically by specifying the &lt;i&gt;DateList&lt;/i&gt; classifier in the&lt;br&gt;
541such as &lt;i&gt;[Title]&lt;/i&gt;, are replaced by the metadata associated&lt;br&gt;
542collection’s configuration file (Figure 7). Classifiers are&lt;br&gt;
543with a particular document. The built-in term &lt;i&gt;[icon]&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
544more elaborate than most plugins, but new ones are seldom&lt;br&gt;
545produces a suitable image that represents the document&lt;br&gt;
546required. The average length of existing classifiers is 230&lt;br&gt;
547(such as a book icon or page icon), and the &lt;i&gt;[link]
[/link]&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
548lines.&lt;br&gt;
549construct forms a hyperlink to the complete document.&lt;br&gt;
550 &lt;br&gt;
551Anything else in the format statement, which in this case is&lt;br&gt;
552Classifiers must specify three things: an initialization&lt;br&gt;
553solely table-cell tags in HTML, is passed through to the&lt;br&gt;
554routine, how individual documents are classified, and the&lt;br&gt;
555page being displayed.&lt;br&gt;
556final browsable data structure. Initialization takes care of&lt;br&gt;any options specified in the configuration file (such as&lt;br&gt;
557As this example shows, creating a new collection that stays&lt;br&gt;
558&lt;i&gt;metadata=Title &lt;/i&gt;on line 9 of Figure 5b). Classifying&lt;br&gt;
559within the bounds of the library’s established capabilities&lt;br&gt;
560individual documents is an iterative process: for each one,&lt;br&gt;
561falls within the capability of many computer users—for&lt;br&gt;
562a call to &lt;i&gt;document-classify&lt;/i&gt; is made. On presentation of the&lt;br&gt;
563instance, computer-trained librarians. Extending&lt;br&gt;
564document’s OID, the necessary metadata is located and&lt;br&gt;
565Greenstone to handle new document formats and browse&lt;br&gt;
566used to control where the document is added to the&lt;br&gt;
567metadata in new ways is more challenging.&lt;br&gt;
568browsable data structure being constructed.&lt;br&gt;
569 &lt;br&gt;Once all documents have been added, a request is made for&lt;br&gt;
570 &lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;Writing new plugins and classifiers&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
571the completed data structure. Some classifiers return the&lt;br&gt;data structure directly; others transform the data structure&lt;br&gt;
572 &lt;br&gt;Extensibility is obtained through plugins and classifiers.&lt;br&gt;
573before it is returned. For example, the &lt;i&gt;AZList&lt;/i&gt; classifier&lt;br&gt;
574&lt;hr&gt;
575&lt;A name=8&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;IMG src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/pdf01-8_1.jpg&quot;&gt;&lt;br&gt;
576a page number, next and previous page buttons, and&lt;br&gt;displaying a particular page at different resolutions. A text&lt;br&gt;version of the page is also available upon which a&lt;br&gt;searching option is also provided.&lt;br&gt;
577Started in 1994, Harvest is also a long-running research&lt;br&gt;project. It provides an efficient means of gathering source&lt;br&gt;data from the Internet and distributing indexing&lt;br&gt;information over the Internet. This is accomplished&lt;br&gt;through five components: &lt;i&gt;gatherer&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;broker&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;indexer&lt;/i&gt;,&lt;br&gt;&lt;i&gt;replicator&lt;/i&gt; and &lt;i&gt;cache&lt;/i&gt;. The first three are central to creating,&lt;br&gt;updating and searching a collection; the last two help to&lt;br&gt;improve performance over the Internet through transparent&lt;br&gt;mirroring and caching techniques.&lt;br&gt;
578The system is configurable and customizable. While&lt;br&gt;searching is most commonly implemented using Glimpse&lt;br&gt;(&lt;i&gt;glimpse.cs.arizona.edu&lt;/i&gt;), in principle any search engine&lt;br&gt;that supports incremental updates and Boolean&lt;br&gt;combinations of attribute-based queries can be used. It is&lt;br&gt;possible to control what type of documents are gathered&lt;br&gt;during creation and updating, and how the query interface&lt;br&gt;
579&lt;b&gt;Figure 7: Browsing a newspaper collection by date&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
580looks and is laid out.&lt;br&gt;
581Sample collections cited by the developers include 21,000&lt;br&gt;
582divides the alphabetically sorted list of metadata into&lt;br&gt;
583computer science technical reports and 7,000 home pages.&lt;br&gt;
584separate pages of about the same size and returns the&lt;br&gt;
585Other examples include a sizable collection of agriculture-&lt;br&gt;
586alphabetic ranges for each one (Figure 4).&lt;br&gt;
587related electronic journals and magazines called “tomato-&lt;br&gt;juice” (accessed through &lt;i&gt;hegel.lib.ncsu.edu&lt;/i&gt;) and a full-text&lt;br&gt;
588&lt;b&gt;OVERVIEW OF RELATED WORK&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
589index of library-related electronic serials&lt;br&gt;
590Two projects that provide substantial open source digital&lt;br&gt;
591(&lt;i&gt;sunsite.berkeley.edu/IndexMorganagus&lt;/i&gt;). Harvest is also&lt;br&gt;
592library software are Dienst (Lagoze and Fielding, 1998)&lt;br&gt;
593often used to index Web sites (for example&lt;br&gt;
594and Harvest (Bowman &lt;i&gt;et al.&lt;/i&gt;, 1994). The origins of Dienst&lt;br&gt;
595&lt;i&gt;www.middlebury.edu&lt;/i&gt;).&lt;br&gt;
596(&lt;i&gt;www.cs.cornell.edu/cdlrg&lt;/i&gt;) stretch back to 1992. The term&lt;br&gt;
597Comparing Greenstone with Dienst and Harvest, there are&lt;br&gt;
598has come to represent three entities: a conceptual&lt;br&gt;
599both similarities and differences. All provide substantial&lt;br&gt;
600architecture for distributed digital libraries; an open&lt;br&gt;
601digital library systems, hence common themes recur, but&lt;br&gt;
602protocol for service communication; and a software&lt;br&gt;
603they are driven by projects with different aims. Harvest,&lt;br&gt;
604system that implements the protocol. To date, five sample&lt;br&gt;
605for instance, was not conceived as a digital library project&lt;br&gt;
606digital libraries have been built using this technology.&lt;br&gt;
607at all, but by virtue of its selective document gathering&lt;br&gt;
608They manifest themselves in two forms: technical reports&lt;br&gt;
609process it can be classed (and is used) as one. While it&lt;br&gt;
610and primary source documents.&lt;br&gt;
611provides sophisticated search options, it lacks the&lt;br&gt;
612Best known is NCSTRL, the Networked Computer&lt;br&gt;
613complementary service of browsing. Furthermore it adds&lt;br&gt;
614Science Technical Reference Library project&lt;br&gt;
615no structure or order to the documents collected, relying&lt;br&gt;
616(&lt;i&gt;www.ncstrl.org&lt;/i&gt;). This collection facilitates searching by&lt;br&gt;
617on whatever structures are present in the site that they&lt;br&gt;
618title, author and abstract, and browsing by year and author,&lt;br&gt;
619were gathered from. A proven strength of the design is its&lt;br&gt;
620across a distributed network of document repositories.&lt;br&gt;
621flexibility through configuration and customizationan&lt;br&gt;
622Documents can (where supported) be delivered in various&lt;br&gt;
623element also present in Greenstone.&lt;br&gt;
624formats such as PostScript, a thumbnail overview of the&lt;br&gt;
625Dienstbest exemplified through the NCSTRL&lt;br&gt;
626pages, and a GIF image of a particular page.&lt;br&gt;
627worksupports searching and browsing, like Greenstone.&lt;br&gt;
628The &lt;i&gt;Making of America&lt;/i&gt; resource is an example of a&lt;br&gt;
629Both use open protocols. Differences include a high&lt;br&gt;
630collection based around primary sourcesin this case&lt;br&gt;
631reliance in Dienst on user-supplied information when a&lt;br&gt;
632American social history, 1830−1900. It has a different&lt;br&gt;
633document is added, and a smaller range of document types&lt;br&gt;
634“look and feel” to NCSTRL, being strongly oriented&lt;br&gt;
635supported—although Dienst does include a document&lt;br&gt;
636toward browsing rather than searching. A user navigates&lt;br&gt;
637model that should, over time, allow this to expand with&lt;br&gt;
638their way through a hierarchical structure of hyperlinks to&lt;br&gt;
639relative ease.&lt;br&gt;
640reach a book of interest. The book itself is a series of&lt;br&gt;
641There are also commercial systems that provide similar&lt;br&gt;
642scanned images: delivery options include going directly to&lt;br&gt;
643digital library services to those described. However, since&lt;br&gt;
644&lt;hr&gt;
645&lt;A name=9&gt;&lt;/a&gt;corporate culture instills proprietary attitudes there is little&lt;br&gt;
646&lt;b&gt;REFERENCES&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
647opportunity for advancement through a shared&lt;br&gt;
6481. Akscyn, R.M. and Witten, I.H. (1998) “Report on First&lt;br&gt;
649collaborative effort. Consequently they are not reviewed&lt;br&gt;
650Summit on International Cooperation on Digital&lt;br&gt;
651here.&lt;br&gt;
652Libraries.” ks.com/idla-wp-oct98.&lt;br&gt;
6532. Bowman, C.M., Danzig, P.B., Manber, U., and&lt;br&gt;
654&lt;b&gt;CONCLUSIONS&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
655Schwartz, M.F. “Scalable Internet resource discovery:&lt;br&gt;
656Greenstone is a comprehensive software system for&lt;br&gt;
657Research problems and approaches” &lt;i&gt;Communications&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
658creating digital library collections. It builds data structures&lt;br&gt;
659&lt;i&gt;of the ACM,&lt;/i&gt; Vol. 37, No. 8, pp. 98−107, 1994.&lt;br&gt;
660for searching and browsing from the material provided,&lt;br&gt;
6613. Fox, E. (1998) “Digital library definitions.”&lt;br&gt;
662rather than relying on any hand-crafting. The process is&lt;br&gt;
663ei.cs.vt.edu/~fox/dlib/def.html.&lt;br&gt;
664controlled by a configuration file, and once a collection&lt;br&gt;exists new material can be added completely&lt;br&gt;
6654. Humanity Libraries (1998) &lt;i&gt;Humanity Development&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
666automatically. Browsing is based on Dublin Core&lt;br&gt;
667&lt;i&gt;Library&lt;/i&gt;. CD-ROM produced by the Global Help&lt;br&gt;
668metadata.&lt;br&gt;
669Project, Antwerp, Belgium.&lt;br&gt;
670New collections can be developed easily, particularly if&lt;br&gt;
6715. Lagoze, C. and Fielding, D “Defining Collections in&lt;br&gt;
672they resemble existing ones. Extensibility is achieved&lt;br&gt;
673Distributed Digital Libraries” &lt;i&gt;D-Lib Magazine&lt;/i&gt;, Nov.&lt;br&gt;
674through software “plugins” that can be written to&lt;br&gt;
6751998.&lt;br&gt;
676accommodate documents, and metadata, in different&lt;br&gt;
6776. PAHO (1999) &lt;i&gt;Virtual Disaster Library&lt;/i&gt;. CD-ROM&lt;br&gt;
678formats. Standard plugins exist for many document types;&lt;br&gt;
679produced by the Pan-American Health Organization,&lt;br&gt;
680new ones are easily written. Browsing is controlled by&lt;br&gt;
681Washington DC, USA.&lt;br&gt;
682“classifiers” that process metadata into browsing structures&lt;br&gt;
6837. McNab, R.J., Witten, I.H. and Boddie, S.J. (1998) “A&lt;br&gt;
684(by date, alphabetical, hierarchical, etc).&lt;br&gt;
685distributed digital library architecture incorporating&lt;br&gt;
686However, the most powerful support for extensibility is&lt;br&gt;
687different index styles.” &lt;i&gt;Proc IEEE Advances in Digital&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
688achieved not by technical means but by making the source&lt;br&gt;
689&lt;i&gt;Libraries&lt;/i&gt;, Santa Barbara, CA, pp. 36–45.&lt;br&gt;
690code freely available under the Gnu public license. Only&lt;br&gt;
6918. Nevill-Manning, C.G., Reed, T., and Witten, I.H.&lt;br&gt;
692through an international cooperative effort will digital&lt;br&gt;
693(1998) “Extracting text from PostScript”&lt;br&gt;
694library software become sufficiently comprehensive to&lt;br&gt;
695&lt;i&gt;Software—Practice and Experience&lt;/i&gt;, Vol. 28, No. 5, pp.&lt;br&gt;
696meet the world’s needs with the richness and flexibility&lt;br&gt;
697481–491; April.&lt;br&gt;
698that users deserve.&lt;br&gt;
6999. UNESCO (1999) &lt;i&gt;SAHEL point DOC: Anthologie du&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
700&lt;b&gt;ACKNOWLEDGMENTS&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;
701&lt;i&gt;développement au Sahel&lt;/i&gt;. CD-ROM produced by&lt;br&gt;UNESCO, Paris, France.&lt;br&gt;
702We gratefully acknowledge all those who have worked on&lt;br&gt;the Greenstone software, and all members of the New&lt;br&gt;
70310. UNU (1998) &lt;i&gt;Collection on critical global issues.&lt;/i&gt; CD-&lt;br&gt;
704Zealand Digital Library project for their enthusiasm and&lt;br&gt;
705ROM produced by the United Nations University&lt;br&gt;
706ideas.&lt;br&gt;
707Press, Tokyo, Japan.&lt;br&gt;
70811. Witten, I.H., Moffat, A. and Bell, T. (1999) &lt;i&gt;Managing&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br&gt;
709&lt;i&gt;Gigabytes: compressing and indexing documents and&lt;br&gt;images&lt;/i&gt;, Morgan Kaufmann, second edition.&lt;br&gt;
710&lt;hr&gt;
711
712
713</Content>
714</Section>
715</Archive>
Note: See TracBrowser for help on using the repository browser.