All Versions
- DSpace 7.x (Current Release)
- DSpace 8.x (Unreleased)
- DSpace 6.x (EOL)
- DSpace 5.x (EOL)
- More Versions...
...
We will use the dspace.cfg as our example for input conventions used through out throughout the system. It is a basic Java properties file, where lines are either comments, starting with a '#', blank lines, or property/value pairs of the form:
...
Some property defaults are "commented out". That is, they have a "#" proceeding preceding them, and the DSpace software ignores the config property. This may cause the feature not to be enabled, or, cause a default property to be used when the software is compiled and updated.
...
Things you should know about editing dspace.cfg
files.
It is important to remember that there are * two dspace.cfg
files after an installation of DSpace.*
...
[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/dspace.cfg
}}unmigrated-wiki-markup[dspace
\]/config/dspace.cfg
}}
dspace.cfg
}} in addition to the runtime file. The two files should always be identical, since the source {{dspace.cfg
}} will be the basis of your next upgrade....
To keep the two files in synchronization, you can edit your files in {{\[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/
}} and then you would run the following commands: {{{*} Wiki Markup
Code Block |
---|
cd |
...
[dspace-source |
...
]/dspace/target/dspace-<version>-build.dir ant update_configs |
...
This will copy the source {{dspace.cfg
}} (along with other configuration files) into the runtime ({{\[dspace
\]/config
}}) directory.
You should remember that after editing your configuration file(s), and you are done and wish to implement the changes, you will need to:
...
ant
\ -Dconfig=
/\[dspace
\]/config/dspace.cfg
update
{_}{*}}} if you are updating your {{dspace.cfg
}} file and wish to see the changes appear. Follow the usual sequence with copying your webapps.unmigrated-wiki-markupdspace.cfg
Configuration Properties File...
Below is a brief "Properties" table for the dspace.cfg file and the documented details are referenced. Please refer to those sections for the complete details of the parameter you are working with.
Property | Ref. Sect. | ||
---|---|---|---|
Basic Information | |||
| 6.3.2 | ||
Database Settings | |||
| 4.2.3 or 6.3.3 | ||
Advanced Database Configuration | |||
| 6.3.3 | ||
Email Settings | |||
| 6.3.4 | ||
File Storage | |||
| 6.3.5 | ||
SRB File Storage | |||
| 6.3.6 | ||
Logging Configuration | |||
| 6.3.7 | ||
Search Settings | |||
| 6.3.8 | ||
Handle Settings | |||
| 6.3.9 | ||
Delegation Administration : Authorization System Configuration | |||
| 6.3.10 | ||
Stackable Authentication Methods | |||
| 6.3.11 | ||
Shibboleth Authentication Settings | |||
| 6.3.11.1 | ||
Password Authentication Options | |||
| 6.3.11.2 | ||
X.509 Certificate Authentication | |||
| 6.3.11.3 | ||
IP-based Authentication | |||
authentication.ip.GROUPNAME | 6.3.11.5 | ||
LDAP Authentication | |||
| 6.3.11.6 | ||
Hierarchical LDAP Settings:
| 6.3.11.6 | ||
Restricted Item Visibility Settings | |||
| 6.3.12 | ||
Proxy Settings | |||
| 6.3.13 | ||
Media Filter--Format Filter Plugin Settings | |||
| 6.3.14 | ||
Custom settings for PDFFilter | |||
| 6.3.14 | ||
Crosswalk and Packager Plugin Settings (MODS, QDC, XSLT, etc.) | |||
| 6.3.15.1 | ||
| 6.3.15 | ||
| 6.3.15.4 | ||
| 6.3.15.5 | ||
Event System Configuration | |||
| 6.3.16 | ||
Embargo Settings | |||
| 6.3.17 | ||
Checksum Checker | |||
| 6.3.18 | ||
Item Export and Download Settings | |||
| 6.3.19 | ||
Subscription Email Option | |||
| 6.3.20 | ||
Bulk (Batch) Metadata Editing | |||
| 6.3.21 | ||
Hide Item Metadata Fields Setting | |||
| 6.3.22 | ||
Submission Process | |||
| 6.3.23 | ||
| 6.3.24 | ||
Settings for Thumbnail Creation | |||
| 6.3.25 | ||
Settings for Item Preview | |||
| 6.3.25 | ||
Settings for Content Count/Strength Information | |||
| 6.3.25 | ||
Browse Configuration | |||
| 6.3.26 | ||
| 6.3.26 | ||
| 6.3.26.3 | ||
| 6.3.26.4 | ||
Multiple Metadata Value Display | |||
| 6.3.27 | ||
Other Browse Contexts | |||
| 6.3.28 | ||
Recent Submission | |||
| 6.3.29 | ||
Submission License Substitution Variables | |||
| 6.3.30 | ||
Syndication Feed (RSS) Settings | |||
| 6.3.31 | ||
OpenSearch Settings | |||
| 6.3.32 | ||
Content Inline Disposition Threshold | |||
| 6.3.33 | ||
Multifile HTML Settings | |||
| 6.3.34 | ||
Sitemap Settings | |||
| 6.3.35 | ||
Authority Control Settings | |||
| 6.3.36 | ||
JSPUI Upload File Settings | |||
| 6.3.37 | ||
JSP Web Interface Settings | |||
| 6.3.38 | ||
JSPUI i18n Locales / Languages | Â | ||
| 6.3.39 | ||
JSPUI Additional Configuration for Item Mapper | |||
| 6.3.40 | ||
JSPUI MyDSpace Display of Group Membership | Â | ||
| 6.3.41 | ||
JSPUI SFX Server Setting | |||
| 6.3.42 | ||
JSPUI Item Recommendation Settings | |||
| 6.3.43 | ||
JSPUI Controlled Vocabulary Settings | |||
| 6.3.44 | ||
JSPUI Session Invalidation | |||
| 6.3.45 | ||
XMLUI Settings (Manakin) | |||
| 6.3.46 | ||
OAI-PMH Specific Configurations | |||
| 5.2.47 | ||
SWORD Specific Configurations | |||
| 6.4.6 | ||
OAI-ORE Harvester Configurations | |||
| 6.3.48 | ||
SOLR Statistics Configurations | |||
| 6.3.49 |
...
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Root directory of DSpace installation. Omit the trailing '/'. Note that if you change this, there are several other parameters you will probably want to change to match, e.g. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Fully qualified hostname; do not include port number. | ||
Property: | | ||
<ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="021cd073-9c38-43dc-8780-a8703ff6494c"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ | Example Value: | | ]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro> |
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Main URL | Informational Note: | Main URL at which DSpace Web UI webapp is deployed. Include any port number, but do not include the trailing ' |
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational note | DSpace base URL. URL that determines whether JSPUI or XMLUI will be loaded by default. Include port number etc., but NOT trailing slash. Change to | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational note: | The base URL of the OAI webapp (do not include /request). | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Short and sweet site name, used throughout Web UI, e-mails and elsewhere (such as OAI protocol) |
...
...
Sometimes DSpace automatically sends e-mail messages to users, for example, to inform them of a new work flow task, or as a subscription e-mail alert. The wording of emails can be changed by editing the relevant file in {{\[dspace
\]/config/emails
}} . Each file is commented. Be careful to keep the right number 'placeholders' (e.g._\{2\}_).
Note: You should replace the contact-information "dspace-help@myu.edu or call us at xxx-555-xxxx
" with your own contact details in:
config/emails/change_password
config/emails/register
...
DSpace supports two distinct options for storing your repository bitstreams (uploaded files). The files are not stored in the database in which Metadata, user information, ... are stored. An assetstore is a directory on your server, on which the bitstreams are stored and consulted afterwards. The usage of different assetstore directories is the default "technique" in DSpace. The parameters below define which assetstores are present, and which one should be used for newly incoming items. As an alternative, DSpace can also use SRB (Storage Resource Brokerage) as an alternative. See Section 5.2.6 SRB File Storage for details regarding SRB.
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | This is Asset (bitstream) store number 0 (Zero). You need not place your assetstore under the /dspace directory, but may want to place it on a different logical volume on the server that DSpace resides. So, you might have something like this: _ | ||
Property: |
| ||
Example Value: |
| ||
Informational Note: | This property specifies extra asset stores like the one above, counting from one (1) upwards. This property is commented out (#) until it is needed. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
<ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="188881ed-9437-4b2d-bf42-80121cab1ee2"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ | Informational Note: | Informational Note: Specify the number of the store to use for new bitstreams with this property. The default is 0 [(zero] ) which corresponds to the 'assestore.dir' above. As the asset store number is stored in the item metadata (in the database), always keep the assetstore numbering consistent and don't change the asset store number in the item metadata. | ]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro> |
Info | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
In the examples above, you can see that your storage does not have to be under the |
...
...
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Where to put the search index files |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | By setting higher values of search.max-clauses will enable prefix searches to work on larger repositories. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | It is possible to create a 'delayed index flusher'. If a web application pushes multiple search requests (i.e. a barrage or sword deposits, or multiple quick edits in the user interface), then this will combine them into a single index update. You set the property key to the number of milliseconds to wait for an update. The example value will hold a Lucene update in a queue for up to 5 seconds. After 5 seconds all waiting updates will be written to the Lucene index. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Which Lucene Analyzer implementation to use. If this is omitted or commented out, the standard DSpace analyzer (designed for English) is used by default. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Instead of the standard English analyzer, the Chinese analyzer is used. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note | Boolean search operator to use. The currently supported values are OR and AND. If this configuration item is missing or commented out, OR is used. AND requires all the search terms to be present. OR requires one or more search terms to be present. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | This is the maximum number of terms indexed for a single field in Lucene. The default is 10,000 words‚Äîoften words‚ often not enough for full-text indexing. If you change this, you will need to re-index for the change to take effect on previously added items. -1 = unlimited (Integer.MAG_VALUE) |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note | This property determines which of the metadata fields are being indexed for search. As an example, if you do not include the title field here, searching for a word in the title will not be matched with the titles of your items.. |
...
In the example above, search.index.1
and search.index.2
and search.index.3
are configured as the author
search field. The author
index is created by Lucene indexing all dc.contributor.*
,dc.creator.*
and description.statementofresponsibility
metadata fields.
After changing the configuration run {{ Wiki Markup /
\[dspace
\]/bin/dspace index-init
}} to regenerate the indexes.
While the indexes are created, this only affects the search results and has no effect on the search components of the user interface. One will need to customize the user interface to reflect the changes, for example, to add the a new search category to the Advanced Search.
...
The CNRI Handle system is a 3rd party service for maintaining persistent URL's. For a nominal fee, you can register a handle prefix for your repository. As a result, your repository items will be also available under the links http://handle.net/<<handle prefix>>/<<item id>>. As the base url of your repository might change or evolve, the persistent handle.net URL's secure the consistency of links to your repository items. For complete information regarding the Handle server, the user should consult Section 3.4.4.. The Handle Server section of Installing DSpace.
Property: | |
Example Value | handle.canonical.prefix = http://hdl.handle.net/ |
Informational Note: | Canonical Handle URL prefix. By default, DSpace is configured to use http://hdl.handle.net/ as the canonical URL prefix when generating |
Property: | |
Example Value | |
Informational Note: | The default installed by DSpace is |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | The default files, as shown in the Example Value is where DSpace will install the files used for the Handle Server. |
...
Property: | | ||||
Example Value: | | ||||
Informational Note: | The option specifies that the email comes from the mentioned header. This value is CASE-Sensitive. | ||||
Property: | | ||||
Example Value: | | ||||
Informational Note: | Optional. Specify the header that carries the user's first name. This is going to be used for the creation of new-user. | ||||
Property: | | ||||
Example Value: | | ||||
Informational Note: | Optional. Specify the header that carries user's last name. This is used for creation of new user. | ||||
Property: | | ||||
Example Value: | | ||||
Informational Note: | This option forces the software to acquire the email from Tomcat. | ||||
Property: | | ||||
Example Value: | | ||||
Informational Note: | Option will allow new users to be registered automatically if the IdP provides sufficient information (and the user does not exist in DSpace). | ||||
Property: |
| ||||
Example Value: |
or
| ||||
Informational Note: | These two options specify which attribute that is responsible for providing user's roles to DSpace and unscope the attributes if needed. When not specified, it is defaulted to 'Shib-EP-UnscopedAffiliation', and ignore-scope is defaulted to 'false'. The value is specified in AAP.xml (Shib 1.3.x) or attribute-filter.xml (Shib 2.x). The value is CASE-Sensitive. The values provided in this header are separated by semi-colon or comma. If your sp service provider (SP) only provides scoped role header, you need to set authentication.shib.role-header.ignore-Scope as 'true'. For example if you only get Shib-EP-ScopedAffiliation instead of Shib-EP-ScopedAffiliation, you name to make your settings as in the example value above. | ||||
Property: | | ||||
Example Value: | | ||||
Informational Note: | When user is fully authN or IdP but would not like to release his/her roles to DSpace (for privacy reasons?), what should the default roles be given to such user. The values are separated by semi-colon or comma. | ||||
Property: |
| ||||
Example Value: |
| ||||
Informational Note: | The following mappings specify role mapping between IdP and Dspace. The left side of the entry is IdP's role (prefixed with 'authentication.shib.role.') which will be mapped to the right entry from DSpace. DSpace's group as indicated on the right entry has to EXIST in DSpace, otherwise user will be identified as 'anonymous'. Multiple values on the right entry should be separated by comma. The values are CASE-Sensitive. Heuristic one-to-one mapping will be done when the IdP groups entry are not listed below (i.e. if 'X' group in IdP is not specified here, then it will be mapped to 'X' group in DSpace if it exists, otherwise it will be mapped to simply 'anonymous'). Given sufficient demand, future release could support regex for the mapping special characters need to be escaped by '\' |
...
<Connector>
tag must include the attribute clientAuth="true"
so the server requests a personal Web certificate from the client.org.dspace.authenticate.X509Authentication
plugin first
to the list of stackable authentication methods in the value of the configuration key plugin.sequence.org.dspace.authenticate.AuthenticationMethod
e.g.: Code Block |
---|
plugin.sequence.org.dspace.authenticate.AuthenticationMethod = \
org.dspace.authenticate.X509Authentication, \
org.dspace.authenticate.PasswordAuthentication |
Code Block |
---|
authentication.x509.keystore.path = path to Java keystore file authentication.x509.keystore.password = password to access the keystore |
Code Block |
---|
authentication.x509.ca.cert = path to certificate file for CA whose client certs to accept. |
authentication.x509.autoregister
configuration property to true
. This lets you automatically accept all users with valid personal certificates. The default is false
....
You can enable IP authentication by adding its method to the stack in the DSpace configuration, e.g.:
{{ Wiki Markup
Code Block |
---|
plugin.sequence.org.dspace.authenticate.AuthenticationMethod = |
...
org.dspace.authenticate.IPAuthentication |
}}
You are than then able to map DSpace groups to IP 's addresses in dspace.cfg by setting {{authentication.ip.GROUPNAME
=
iprange
\[,
iprange
...
\]
}}, e.g:
Code Block |
---|
authentication.ip.MY_UNIVERSITY = 10.1.2.3, \ # Full IP 13.5, \ # Partial IP 11.3.4.5/24, \ # with CIDR 12.7.8.9/255.255.128.0, # with netmask 2001:18e8::/32 # IPv6 too |
Negative matches can be set by prepending the entry with a '-'. For example if you want to include all of a class B network except for users of a contained class c network, you could use: 111.222,-111.222.333.
...
Standard LDAP Configuration | ||
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This setting will enable or disable LDAP authentication in DSpace. With the setting off, users will be required to register and login with their email address. With this setting on, users will be able to login and register with their LDAP user ids and passwords. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This is the url to your institution's LDAP server. You may or may not need the /o=myu.edu part at the end. Your server may also require the ldaps:// protocol. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Explanation: | This is the unique identifier field in the LDAP directory where the username is stored. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This is the object context used when authenticating the user. It is appended to the ldap.id_field and username. For example | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | <ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="51dd9641-b87b-402e-bd0c-e85dbae30415"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ |
Informational Note: | This is the search context used when looking up a user's LDAP object to retrieve their data for autoregistering. With ldap.autoregister turned on, when a user authenticates without an EPerson object we search the LDAP directory to get their name and email address so that we can create one for them. So after we have authenticated against uid=username,ou=people,o=byu.edu we now search in ou=people for filtering on [uid=username]. Often the | |
]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro> | Property: | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This is the LDAP object field where the user's email address is stored. "mail" is the default and the most common for ldap LDAP servers. If the mail field is not found the username will be used as the email address when creating the eperson object. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This is the LDAP object field where the user's last name is stored. "sn" is the default and is the most common for LDAP servers. If the field is not found the field will be left blank in the new eperson object. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This is the LDAP object field where the user's given names are stored. I'm not sure how common the givenName field is in different LDAP instances. If the field is not found the field will be left blank in the new eperson object. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This is the field where the user's phone number is stored in the LDAP directory. If the field is not found the field will be left blank in the new eperson object. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This will turn LDAP autoregistration on or off. With this on, a new EPerson object will be created for any user who successfully authenticates against the LDAP server when they first login. With this setting off, the user must first register to get an EPerson object by entering their ldap username and password and filling out the forms. | |
LDAP Users Group | ||
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | If required, a group name can be given here, and all users who log into LDAP will automatically become members of this group. This is useful if you want a group made up of all internal authenticated users. (Remember to log on as the administrator, add this to the "Groups" with read rights). |
...
Properties: | | |
Example Values: | | |
<ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="4777cc54-c2c5-4d85-b45f-304b3aa184f0"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ | Informational Note: | This defines a crosswalk named MODS whose configuration comes from the file |
The MODS crosswalk properties file is a list of properties describing how DSpace metadata elements are to be turned into elements of the MODS XML output document. The property name is a concatenation of the metadata schema, element name, and optionally the qualifier. For example, the contributor.author element in the native Dublin Core schema would be: dc.contributor.author. The value of the property is a line containing two segments separated by the vertical bar ("|
"_): The first part is an XML fragment which is copied into the output document. The second is an XPath expression describing where in that fragment to put the value of the metadata element. For example, in this property:
Code Block |
---|
dc.contributor.author = <mods:name>
<mods:role>
<mods:roleTerm type="text">author</mods:roleTerm>
</mods:role>
<mods:namePart>%s</mods:namePart>
</mods:name> |
Some of the examples include the string "%s
" in the prototype XML where the text value is to be inserted, but don't pay any attention to it, it is an artifact that the crosswalk ignores. For example, given an author named Jack Florey, the crosswalk will insert
...
As shown above, there are three (3) parts that make up the properties "key":
Code Block |
---|
crosswalk.submissionPluginName.stylesheet = 1 2 3 4 |
...
{{crosswalk
}} first part of the property key.
{{submission}} second part of the property key.
{{PluginName}} is the name of the plugin. The _path_ value is the path to the file containing the crosswalk stylesheet (relative to {{/\[dspace\]/config}}).
Here is an example that configures a crosswalk named "LOM" using a stylesheet in {{\[dspace\
submission
second part of the property key.
PluginName
is the name of the plugin. The path value is the path to the file containing the crosswalk stylesheet (relative to /[dspace]/config
).
Here is an example that configures a crosswalk named "LOM" using a stylesheet in [dspace]/config/crosswalks/d-lom.xsl
}}:
{{crosswalk.submission.LOM.stylesheet
=
crosswalks/d-lom.xsl
}}
A dissemination crosswalk can be configured by starting with the property key _crosswalk.dissemination_. Example:
{{crosswalk.dissemination.PluginName.stylesheet
=
path
}}
The _PluginName_ is the name of the plugin (\!) . The _path_ value is the path to the file containing the crosswalk stylesheet (relative to {{/
\[dspace
\]/config
}}).
You can make two different plugin names point to the same crosswalk, by adding two configuration entries with the same path:
Code Block |
---|
crosswalk.submission.MyFormat.stylesheet = crosswalks/myformat.xslt
crosswalk.submission.almost_DC.stylesheet = crosswalks/myformat.xslt |
The dissemination crosswalk must also be configured with an XML Namespace (including prefix and URI) and an XML schema for its output format. This is configured on additional properties in the DSpace configuration:
Code Block |
---|
crosswalk.dissemination.PluginName.namespace.Prefix = namespace-URI
crosswalk.dissemination.PluginName.schemaLocation = schemaLocation value |
For example:
Code Block |
---|
crosswalk.dissemination.qdc.namespace.dc = http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/
crosswalk.dissemination.qdc.namespace.dcterms = http://purl.org/dc/terms/
crosswalk.dissemination.qdc.schemalocation = http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/ \
http://dublincore.org/schemas/xmls/qdc/2003/04/02/qualifieddc.xsd |
...
Properties: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Properties: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Properties: | | ||
Example Value: |
| ||
Properties: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Configuration of the QDC Crosswalk dissemination plugin for Qualified DC. _ (Add lower-case name for OAI-PMH. That is, change QDC to qdc.)}} |
...
In the property key "{{crosswalk.qdc.properties.QDC
}}" the value of this property is a path to a separate properties file containing the configuration for this crosswalk. The pathname is relative to the DSpace configuration directory {{/
\[dspace
\]/config
}} . Referring back to the "Example Value" for this property key, one has {{crosswalks/qdc.properties
}} which defines a crosswalk named {{QDC
}} whose configuration comes from the file {{\[dspace
\]/config/crosswalks/qdc.properties
}} .
You will also need to configure the namespaces and schema location strings for the XML output generated by this crosswalk. The namespaces properties names are formatted:
...
Code Block |
---|
# implementation of embargo setter plugin - replace with local implementation if applicable plugin.single.org.dspace.embargo.EmbargoSetter = org.dspace.embargo.DefaultEmbargoSetter |
Code Block |
---|
# implementation of embargo lifter plugin--replace with local implementation if applicable plugin.single.org.dspace.embargo.EmbargoLifter = org.dspace.embargo.DefaultEmbargoLifter |
...
Code Block |
---|
<form name="traditional"> <page number="1"> ... <field> <dc-schema>dc</dc-schema> <dc-element>description</dc-element> <dc-qualifier>embargo</dc-qualifier> <repeatable>false</repeatable> <label>Embargo Date</label> <input-type>onebox</input-type> <hint>If required, enter date 'yyyy-mm-dd' when embargo expires or 'forever'.</hint> <required></required> </field> |
Code Block |
---|
# DC metadata field to hold the user-supplied embargo terms embargo.field.terms = dc.description.embargo # DC metadata field to hold computed "lift date" of embargo embargo.field.lift = dc.description.embargo |
Code Block |
---|
<form name="traditional"> <page number="1"> ... <field> <dc-schema>dc</dc-schema> <dc-element>embargo</dc-element> <dc-qualifier>terms</dc-qualifier> <repeatable>false</repeatable> <label>Embargo Terms</label> <input-type value-pairs-name="embargo_terms">dropdown</input-type> <hint>If required, select embargo terms.</hint> <required></required> </field> |
Code Block |
---|
<form-value-pairs> ... <value-pairs value-pairs-name="embargo_terms" dc-term="embargo.terms"> <pair> <displayed-value>90 days</displayed-value> <stored-value>90 days</stored-value> </pair> <pair> <displayed-value>6 months</displayed-value> <stored-value>6 months</stored-value> </pair> <pair> <displayed-value>1 year</displayed-value> <stored-value>1 year</stored-value> </pair> </value-pairs> |
Code Block |
---|
# DC metadata field to hold the user-supplied embargo terms
embargo.field.terms = dc.embargo.terms
# DC metadata field to hold computed "lift date" of embargo
embargo.field.lift = dc.embargo.lift
# implementation of embargo setter plugin - replace with local implementation if applicable
plugin.single.org.dspace.embargo.EmbargoSetter = org.dspace.embargo.DayTableEmbargoSetter |
Now add a new property called 'embargo.terms.days' as follows:
Code Block |
---|
# DC metadata field to hold computed "lift date" of embargo
embargo.terms.days = 90 days:90, 6 months:180, 1 year:365 |
[dspace
\]/bin/dspace
embargo-lifter
}} .
...
DSpace now comes with a Checksum Checker script ({{\[dspace
\]/bin/dspace
checker
}}) which can be scheduled to verify the checksum of every item within DSpace. Since DSpace calculates and records the checksum of every file submitted to it, this script is able to determine whether or not a file has been changed (either manually or by some sort of corruption or virus). The idea being that the earlier you can identify a file has changed, the more likely you'd be able to recover it (assuming it was not a wanted change).
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | The Default dispatcher is case non is specified. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | This option specifies the default time frame after which all checksum checks are removed from the database (defaults to 10 years). This means that after 10 years, all successful or unsuccessful matches are removed from the database. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | This option specifies the time frame after which a successful “match” match will be removed from your DSpace database (defaults to 8 weeks). This means that after 8 weeks, all successful matches are automatically deleted from your database (in order to keep that database table from growing too large). |
...
General Web User Interface Configurations
In this section of Configuration, we address the agnostic WEB User Interface that is used for JSP UI and XML UI. Some of the configurations will give information towards customization or refer you to the appropriate documentation.
Property: | webui.licence_bundle.show | |
Example Value: | webui.licence_bundle.show = false | |
Informational Note: | Sets whether to display the contents of the license bundle (often just the deposit license in the standard DSpace installation). | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | Controls whether to display thumbnails on browse and search result pages. If you have customized the Browse columnlist, then you must also include a "thumbnail" column in your configuration. _(This configuration property key is not used by XMLUI. To show thumbnails using XMLUI, you need to create a theme which displays them)._ | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This property determines the maximum height of the browse/search thumbnails in pixels (px). This only needs to be set if the thumbnails are required to be smaller than the dimensions of thumbnails generated by MediaFilter. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This determines the maximum width of the browse/search thumbnails in pixels (px). This only needs to be set if the thumbnails are required to be smaller than the dimensions of thumbnails generated by MediaFilter. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This determines whether or not to display the thumbnail against each bitstream. (This configuration property key is not used by XMLUI. To show thumbnails using XMLUI, you need to create a theme which displays them). | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This determines where clicks on the thumbnail in browse and search screens should lead. The only values currently supported are "item" or "bitstream", which will either take the user to the item page, or directly download the bitstream. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This property sets the maximum width of generated thumbnails that are being displayed on item pages. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This property sets the maximum height of generated thumbnails that are being displayed on item pages. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | Whether or not the user can "preview" the image. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This property sets the maximum width for the preview image. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This property sets the maximum height for the preview image. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This is the brand text that will appear with the image. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | An abbreviated form of the full Branded Name. This will be used when the preview image cannot fit the normal text. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | The height (in px) of the brand. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This property sets the font for your Brand text that appears with the image. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | This property sets the font point (size) for your Brand text that appears with the image. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | The Dublin Core field that will display along with the preview. This field is optional. | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
Informational Note: | Determines if communities and collections should display item counts when listed. The default behavior if omitted, is true. (This configuration property key is not used by XMLUI. To show thumbnails using XMLUI, you need to create a theme which displays them). | |
Property: | | |
Example Value: | | |
<ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="052eee21-b007-4219-9473-0a3c6ccb8495"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ | Informational Note: | When showing the strengths, should they be counted in real time, or fetched from the cache. Counts fetched in real time will perform an actual count of the database contents every time a page with this feature is requested, which will not scale. If you set the property key is set to cache ("true") you must run the following command periodically to update the count: |
...
Code Block |
---|
webui.browse.index.1 = dateissued:metadata:dc.date.issued:date:full webui.browse.index.2 = author:metadata:dc.contributor.*:text webui.browse.index.3 = title:metadataitem:dc.title:title:full webui.browse.index.4 = subject:metadata:dc.subject.*:text #webui.browse.index.5 = dateaccessioned:item:dateaccessioned |
...
Element | Definition and Options (if available) |
---|---|
| n is the index number. The index numbers must start from 1 and increment continuously by 1 thereafter. Deviation form from this will cause an error during install or a configuration update. So anytime you add a new browse index, remember to increase the number. (Commented out index numbers may be used over again). |
| The name by which the index will be identified. You will need to update your Messages.properties file to match this field. (The form used in the Messages.properties file is: |
| Only two options are available: " |
| The schema used for the field to be index. The default is dc (for Dublin Core). |
| The schema element. In Dublin Core, for example, the author element is referred to as "Contributor". The user should consult the default Dublin Core Metadata Registry table in Appendix A. |
| This is the qualifier to the <element> component. The user has two choices: an asterisk "" or a proper qualifier of the element. The asterisk is a wildcard and causes DSpace to index all types of the schema element. For example, if you have the element "contributor" and the qualifier "" then you would index all contributor data regardless of the qualifier. Another example, you have the element "subject" and the qualifier "lcsh" would cause the indexing of only those fields that have the qualifier "lcsh". (This means you would only index Library of Congress Subject Headings and not all data elements that are subjects. |
| This refers to the datatype of the field: |
| Choose |
If you are customizing this list beyond the default, you will need to insert the text you wish to appear in the navigation and on link and buttons. You need to edit the Messages.properties
file. The form of the parameter(s) in the file:
browse.type.<index name>
The title browse set as the default acts a little different than when you customize it. Â So, for example, if you wish to have more than the standard "title" appear in the title browse index, you would need to change your property to look like the others. Â In the example below, we've decided to not only index the title, but the series too.
webui.browse.index.3 = title:metadata:dc.title,dc.relation.ispartofseries:title:
full
webui.browse.index.3 = title:metadata:dc.title,dc.relation.ispartofseries:title:full
Defining Sort Options
Sort options will be available when browsing a list of items (i.e. only in "full" mode, not "single" mode). You can define an arbitrary number of fields to Sort options will be available when browsing a list of items (i.e. only in "full" mode, not "single" mode). You can define an arbitrary number of fields to sort on, irrespective of which fields you display using web.itemlist.columns. For example, the default entries that appear in the dspace.cfg as default installation:
...
Element | Definition and Options (if available) |
---|---|
| n is an arbitrary number you choose. |
| The name by which the sort option will be identified. This may be used in later configuration or to locate the message key (found in Messages.properties file) for this index. |
| The schema used for the field to be index. The default is dc (for Dublin Core). |
| The schema element. In Dublin Core, for example, the author element is referred to as "Contributor". The user should consult the default Dublin Core Metadata Registry table in Appendix A. |
| This is the qualifier to the <element> component. The user has two choices: an asterisk "*" or a proper qualifier of the element. |
| This refers to the datatype of the field: |
...
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | This controls the normalization of the index entry. Uncommenting the option (which is commented out by default) will make the metadata items case-insensitive. This will result in a single entry in the example above. However, the value displayed may be any one of the above‚Äîdepending above‚ depending on what representation was present in the first item indexed. |
...
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Where |
...
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | This is used to configure which fields should link to other browse listings. This should be associated with the name of one of the browse indexes ( |
...
Element | Definition and Options (if available) |
---|---|
| {{<n{{>}} is an arbitrary number you choose |
| This need to match your entry for the index name from webui.browse.index property key. |
| Use the DC element (and qualifier) |
...
This will enable syndication feeds‚Äîlinks feeds‚ links display on community and collection home pages. This setting is not used by the XMLUI, as you enable feeds in your theme.
...
The following configuration is used to change the disposition behavior of the browser. That is, when the browser will attempt to open the file or download it to the user's -specified location. For example, the default size is 8Mb8MB. When an item being viewed is larger than 8MB, the browser will download the file to the desktop (or wherever you have it set to download) and the user will have to open it manually.
Property: | |
Example value: | |
Informational Note: | The default value is set to 8Mb8MB. This property key applies to the JSPUI interface. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | The default value is set to 8Mb8MB. This property key applies to the XMLUI (Manakin) interface. |
...
The following section is limited to JSPUI. If the user wishes to use XMLUI settings, please refer to Chapter 7: XMLUI Configuration and Customization.
Property: | Property: |
| ||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | Sets whether to display the contents of the license bundle (often just the deposit license in the standard DSpace installation). | |||
| ||||
Example Value: |
| |||
Informational Note: | This is used to customize the DC metadata fields that display in the item display (the brief display) when pulling up a record. The format is: | |||
Property: |
| |||
Example Value: |
| |||
Informational Note: | When using "resolver" in webui.itemdisplay to render identifiers as resolvable links, the base URL is take from <code>webui.resolver.<n>.baseurl<code> where <code>webui.resolver.<n>.baseurl<code> matches the urn specified in the metadata value. The value is appended to the "baseurl" as is, so the baseurl needs to end with the forward slash almost in any case. If no urn is specified in the value it will be displayed as simple text. For the doi and hdl urn defaults values are provided, respectively http://dc.doi.org and http://hdl.handle.net are used. If a metadata value with style "doi", "handle" or "resolver" matches a URL already, it is simply rendered as a link with no other manipulation. | |||
Property: | | |||
Example Value: |
| |||
Informational Note: | Specify which strategy to use for select the style for an item. | |||
Property: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | Specify which collections use which views by Handle. | |||
Property: |
| |||
Example Value: |
| |||
Informational Note: | Specify which metadata to use as name of the style | |||
Property: | | |||
Example Value: |
| |||
Informational Note: | Customize the DC fields to use in the item listing page. Elements will be displayed left to right in the order they are specified here. The form is <schema prefix>.<element>[.<qualifier> | .*][(date)], ... | |||
Property: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | You can customize the width of each column with the following line--you can have numbers (pixels) or percentages. For the 'thumbnail' column, a setting of '*' will use the max width specified for browse thumbnails (cf. | |||
Property: |
| |||
Example Value: | _}} | |||
Informational Note: | You can override the DC fields used on the listing page for a given browse index and/or sort option. As a sort option or index may be defined on a field that isn't normally included in the list, this allows you to display the fields that have been indexed/sorted on. There are a number of forms the configuration can take, and the order in which they are listed below is the priority in which they will be used (so a combination of an index name and sort name will take precedence over just the browse name).In the last case, a sort option name will always take precedence over a browse index name. Note also, that for any additional columns you list, you will need to ensure there is an itemlist.<field name> entry in the messages file. | |||
Property: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | This would display the date of the accession in place f of the issue date whenever the dateaccessioned browsed index or sort option is selected. Just like webui.itemlist.columns, you will need to include a 'thumbnail' entry to display the thumbnails in the item list. | |||
Property: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | As in the aforementioned property key, you can customize the width of the columns for each configured column list, substituting '.widths' for '.columns' in the property name. See the setting for _webui.itemlist.widths_ for more information. | |||
Property: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | You can also set the overall size of the item list table with the following setting. It can lead to faster table rendering when used with the column widths above, but not generally recommended. | |||
Property: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
<ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="b819c43b-d141-443a-9c14-1b6b1dca2170"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ | Informational Note: | Enable or disable session invalidation upon login or logout. This feature is enabled by default to help prevent session hijacking but may cause problems for shibboleth, etc. If omitted, the default value is 'true'. [Only used for JSPUI authentication]. ]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro> |
...
\[i18n -- – Locales\]
...
If you set webui.supported.locales make sure that all the related additional files for each language are available. LOCALE should correspond to the locale set in webui.supported.locales, e. g.: for webui.supported.locales = en, de, fr, there should be:
...
[dspace-source
\]/dspace/modules/jspui/src/main/resources/Messages.properties
}}unmigrated-wiki-markup[dspace-source
\]/dspace/modules/jspui/src/main/resources/Messages_en.properties
}}[dspace-source
\]/dspace/modules/jspui/src/main/resources/Messages_de.properties
}}[dspace-source
\]/dspace/modules/jspui/src/main/resources/Messages_fr.properties
}}
\\
Files to be localized:[dspace-source
\]/dspace/modules/jspui/src/main/resources/Messages_LOCALE.properties
}}[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/input-forms_LOCALE.xml
}}[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/default_LOCALE.license
{}}}{{{}{_}{_{}}}{{}should be pure ascii}}- should be pure ASCII
[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/news-top_LOCALE.html
}}[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/news-side_LOCALE.html
}}[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/emails/change_password_LOCALE
}}unmigrated-wiki-markup[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/emails/feedback_LOCALE
}}unmigrated-wiki-markup[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/emails/internal_error_LOCALE
}}unmigrated-wiki-markup[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/emails/register_LOCALE
}}[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/emails/submit_archive_LOCALE
}}[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/emails/submit_reject_LOCALE
}}unmigrated-wiki-markup[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/emails/submit_task_LOCALE
}}unmigrated-wiki-markup[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/emails/subscription_LOCALE
}}unmigrated-wiki-markup[dspace-source
\]/dspace/config/emails/suggest_LOCALE
}}[dspace
\]/webapps/jspui/help/collection-admin_LOCALE.html
{}}}{{{}{_}{_{}}}{{}in html keep the jump link as original; must be copied to \- in html keep the jump link as original; must be copied to [dspace-source
\]/dspace/modules/jspui/src/main/webapp/help
}}[dspace
\]/webapps/jspui/help/index_LOCALE.html
{}}}{{{}{_}{_{}}}{{}must be copied to \- must be copied to [dspace-source
\]/dspace/modules/jspui/src/main/webapp/help
}}unmigrated-wiki-markup{{\[dspace
\]/webapps/jspui/help/site-admin_LOCALE.html
{}}}{{{}{_}{_{}}}{{}must be copied to \- must be copied to [dspace-source
\]/dspace/modules/jspui/src/main/webapp/help
}}Because the item mapper requires a primitive implementation of the browse system to be present, we simply need to tell that system which of our indexes defines the author browse (or equivalent) so that the mapper can list authors' items for mapping
...
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
 | |
Informational Note: | SFX query is appended to this URL. If this property is commented out or omitted, SFX support is switched off. |
...
All the parameters mapping are defined in {{\[
}}{{{}dspace
{}}}{{\]
}}{{/config/sfx.xml
}} file. The program will check the parameters in {{sfx.xml
}} and retrieve the correct metadata of the item. It will then parse the string to your resolver.
For the following example, the program will search the first query-pair which is DOI of the item. If there is a DOI for that item, your retrieval results will be, for example:
http://researchspace.auckland.ac.nz/handle/2292/5763
Example. For setting DOI in sfx.xml
Code Block |
---|
<query-pairs>
<field>
<querystring>rft_id=info:doi/</querystring>
<dc-schema>dc</dc-schema>
<dc-element>identifier</dc-element>
<dc-qualifier>doi</dc-qualifier>
</field>
</query-pairs> |
...
If there is no DOI for that item, it will search next query-pair based on the {{\[dspace
\]/config/sfx.xml
}} and then so on.
Example of using ISSN, volume, issue for item without DOI
{{\ Wiki Markup [http://researchspace.auckland.ac.nz/handle/2292/4947
\]
}}
For parameter passing to the <querystring>
Code Block |
---|
<querystring>rft_id=info:doi/</querystring> |
Please refer to these:
{{\ Wiki Markup [http://ocoins.info/cobgbook.html
\]}}
{{\]
[http://ocoins.info/cobg.html
\]
}}
Program assume won't won’t get empty string for the item, as there will at least author, title for the item to pass to the resolver.
For contributor author, program maintains original DSpace SFX function of extracting author's author‘s first and last name.
Code Block |
---|
<field>
<querystring>rft.aulast=</querystring>
<dc-schema>dc</dc-schema>
<dc-element>contributor</dc-element>
<dc-qualifier>author</dc-qualifier>
</field>
<field>
<querystring>rft.aufirst=</querystring>
<dc-schema>dc</dc-schema>
<dc-element>contributor</dc-element>
<dc-qualifier>author</dc-qualifier>
</field> |
...
Property: | |
Example Value: | webui.suggest.enable = true |
Informational Note: | Show a link to the item recommendation page from item display page. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Enable only if the user is logged in. If this key commented out, the default value is false. |
...
DSpace now supports controlled vocabularies to confine the set of keywords that users can use while describing items.
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Enable or disable the controlled vocabulary add-on. WARNING: This feature is not compatible with WAI (it requires javascript JavaScript to function). |
The need for a limited set of keywords is important since it eliminates the ambiguity of a free description system, consequently simplifying the task of finding specific items of information.
...
Code Block |
---|
<node id="acmccs98" label="ACMCCS98"> <isComposedBy> <node id="A." label="General Literature"> <isComposedBy> <node id="A.0" label="GENERAL"/> <node id="A.1" label="INTRODUCTORY AND SURVEY"/> </isComposedBy> </node> </isComposedBy> </node> |
Your You are free to use any application you want to create your controlled vocabularies. A simple text editor should be enough for small projects. Bigger projects will require more complex tools. You may use Proteg√© Protegé to create your taxonomies, save them as OWL and then use a XML Stylesheet (XSLT) to transform your documents to the appropriate format. Future enhancements to this add-on should make it compatible with standard schemas such as OWL or RDF.
In order to make DSpace compatible with WAI 2.0, the add-on is turned off by default (the add-on relies strongly on Javascript JavaScript to function). It can be activated by setting the following property in dspace.cfg
:
webui.controlledvocabulary.enable = true
unmigrated-wiki-markup
New vocabularies should be placed in {{\[dspace
\]/config/controlled-vocabularies/
}} and must be according to the structure described. A validation XML Schema can be downloaded [here|Schema (controlledvocabulary.xsd|here].) can be found in that directory.
Vocabularies need to be associated with the correspondent DC metadata fields. Edit the file [dspace
Vocabularies need to be associated with the correspondent DC metadata fields. Edit the file {{\[dspace\ Wiki Markup ]/config/input-forms.xml
}} and place a _"vocabulary"_ tag under the _"field"_ element that you want to control. Set value of the _"vocabulary"_ element to the name of the file that contains the vocabulary, leaving out the extension (the add-on will only load files with extension "*.xml"). For example:
Code Block |
---|
<field> <dc-schema>dc</dc-schema> <dc-element>subject</dc-element> <dc-qualifier></dc-qualifier> <!-- An input-type of twobox MUST be marked as repeatable --> <repeatable>true</repeatable> <label>Subject Keywords</label> <input-type>twobox</input-type> <hint> Enter appropriate subject keywords or phrases below. </hint> <required></required> <vocabulary [closed="false"]>nsi</vocabulary> </field> |
...
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | A list of supported locales for Manakin. Manakin will look at a user's browser configuration for the first language that appears in this list to make available to in the interface. This parameter is a comma separated list of Locales. All types of Locales country, country_language, country_language_variant. Note that if the appropriate files are not present (i.e. Messages_XX_XX.xml) then Manakin will fall back through to a more general language. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Force all authenticated connections to use SSL, only non-authenticated connections are allowed over plain http. If set to true, then you need to ensure that the 'dspace.hostname' parameter is set to the correctly. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Determine if new users should be allowed to register. This parameter is useful in conjunction with Shibboleth where you want to disallow registration because Shibboleth will automatically register the user. Default value is true. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Determines if users should be able to edit their own metadata. This parameter is useful in conjunction with Shibboleth where you want to disable the user's ability to edit their metadata because it came from Shibboleth. Default value is true. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Determine if super administrators (those whom are in the Administrators group) can login as another user from the "edit eperson" page. This is useful for debugging problems in a running dspace instance, especially in the workflow process. The default value is false, i.e., no one may assume the login of another user. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | After a user has logged into the system, which url should they be directed? Leave this parameter blank or undefined to direct users to the homepage, or /profile for the user's profile, or another reasonable choice is /submissions to see if the user has any tasks awaiting their attention. The default is the repository home page. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Allow the user to override which theme is used to display a particular page. When submitting a request add the HTTP parameter "themepath" which corresponds to a particular theme, that specified theme will be used instead of the any other configured theme. Note that this is a potential security hole allowing execution of unintended code on the server, this option is only for development and debugging it should be turned off for any production repository. The default value unless otherwise specified is "false". |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Determine which bundles administrators and collection administrators may upload into an existing item through the administrative interface. If the user does not have the appropriate privileges (add and write) on the bundle then that bundle will not be shown to the user as an option. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | On the community-list page should all the metadata about a community/collection be available to the theme. This parameter defaults to true, but if you are experiencing performance problems on the community-list page you should experiment with turning this option off. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Normally, Manakin will fully verify any cache pages before using a cache copy. This means that when the community-list page is viewed the database is queried for each community/collection to see if their metadata has been modified. This can be expensive for repositories with a large community tree. To help solve this problem you can set the cache to be assumed valued for a specific set of time. The downside of this is that new or editing communities/collections may not show up the website for a period of time. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Optionally, you may configure Manakin to take advantage of metadata stored as a bitstream. The MODS metadata file must be inside the "METADATA" bundle and named MODS.xml. If this option is set to 'true' and the bitstream is present then it is made available to the theme for display. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Optionally, you may configure Manakin to take advantage of metadata stored as a bitstream. The METS metadata file must be inside the "METADATA" bundle and named METS.xml. If this option is set to "true" and the bitstream is present then it is made available to the theme for display. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | If you would like to use Google analytics Analytics to track general website statistics then use the following parameter to provide your analytics key. First sign up for an account at http://analytics.google.com, then create an entry for your repositories website. Google Analytics will give you a snippet of javascript code to place on your site, inside that snip it is your google analytics Google Analytics key usually found in the line: _uacct = "UA-XXXXXXX-X" Take this key (just the UA-XXXXXX-X part) and place it here in this parameter. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Assign how many page views will be recorded and displayed in the control panel's activity viewer. The activity tab allows an administrator to debug problems in a running DSpace by understanding who and how their dspace is currently being used. The default value is 250. |
Property: | |
Example Value: | |
Informational Note: | Determine where the control panel's activity viewer receives an events IP address from. If your DSpace is in a load balanced environment or otherwise behind a context-switch then you will need to set the parameter to the HTTP parameter that records the original IP address. |
...
Property: | |
Example Value: |
|
Informational Note: | Max response size for DIDL. This is the maximum size in bytes of the files you wish to enclose Base64 encoded in your responses, remember that the base64 encoding process uses a lot of memory. We recommend at most 200000 for answers of 30 records each on a 1 Gigabyte machine. Ultimately this will change to a streaming model and remove this restriction. Also please remember to allocate plenty of memory, at least 512 MB to your Tomcat. Optional: DSpace uses 100 records as the limit for the oai responses. You can alter this by changing /[dspace-source]/dspace-oai/dspace-oai-api/src/main/java/org/dspace/app/oai/DSpaceOAICatalog.java to codify the declaration: private final int MAX_RECORDS = 100 to private final int MAX_RECORDS = 30 ]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro> |
...
[dspace
\]/config/oaicat.properties
}} of the form: {{Crosswalks.plugin_name=org.dspace.app.oai.PluginCrosswalk
}} (where {{plugin_name
}} is the actual plugin's name, e.g. "mets" or "qdc"). These lines are all near the bottom of the file. dspace.cfg
. Then add a line similar to above to the oaicat.properties
file.http://mydspace/oai/request?verb=ListRecords&metadataPrefix=mets
...
oai.didl.maxresponse
configuration in dspace.cfg
[dspace
\]/config/oaicat.properties
}} filehttp://mydspace/oai/request?verb=ListRecords&metadataPrefix=didl
...
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | The EPerson under whose authorization automatic harvesting will be performed. This field does not have a default value and must be specified in order to use the harvest scheduling system. This will most likely be the DSpace admin account created during installation. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
<ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="08488ef6-9c40-4f83-8531-03797ea0bdf2"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ | Informational Note: | The base url of the OAI-PMH disseminator webapp (i.e. do not include the /request on the end). This is necessary in order to mint URIs for ORE Resource Maps. The default value of | |
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | The webapp responsible for minting the URIs for ORE Resource Maps. If using oai, the dspace.oai.uri config value must be set. The URIs generated for ORE ReMs follow the following convention for both cases._baseURI/metadata/handle/theHandle/ore.xml}} | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Determines whether the harvest scheduler process starts up automatically when the XMLUI webapp is redeployed. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: |
| ||
Informational Note: | This field can be repeated and serves as a link between the metadata formats supported by the local repository and those supported by the remote OAI-PMH provider. It follows the form | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: |
| ||
Informational Note: | This field works in much the same way as | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Amount of time subtracted from the from argument of the PMH request to account for the time taken to negotiate a connection. Measured in seconds. Default value is 120. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | How frequently the harvest scheduler checks the remote provider for updates. Should always be longer than _timePadding _. Measured in minutes. Default value is 720. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | The heartbeat is the frequency at which the harvest scheduler queries the local database to determine if any collections are due for a harvest cycle (based on the harvestFrequency) value. The scheduler is optimized to then sleep until the next collection is actually ready to be harvested. The minHeartbeat and maxHeartbeat are the lower and upper bounds on this timeframe. Measured in seconds. Default value is 30. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | The heartbeat is the frequency at which the harvest scheduler queries the local database to determine if any collections are due for a harvest cycle (based on the harvestFrequency) value. The scheduler is optimized to then sleep until the next collection is actually ready to be harvested. The minHeartbeat and maxHeartbeat are the lower and upper bounds on this timeframe. Measured in seconds. Default value is 3600 (1 hour). | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | How many harvest process threads the scheduler can spool up at once. Default value is 3. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | How much time passes before a harvest thread is terminated. The termination process waits for the current item to complete ingest and saves progress made up to that point. Measured in hours. Default value is 24. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | You have three (3) choices. When a harvest process completes for a single item and it has been passed through ingestion crosswalks for ORE and its chosen descriptive metadata format, it might end up with DIM values that have not been defined in the local repository. This setting determines what should be done in the case where those DIM values belong to an already declared schema. Fail will terminate the harvesting task and generate an error. Ignore will quietly omit the unknown fields. Add will add the missing field to the local repository's metadata registry. Default value: fail. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | When a harvest process completes for a single item and it has been passed through ingestion crosswalks for ORE and its chosen descriptive metadata format, it might end up with DIM values that have not been defined in the local repository. This setting determines what should be done in the case where those DIM values belong to an unknown schema. Fail will terminate the harvesting task and generate an error. Ignore will quietly omit the unknown fields. Add will add the missing schema to the local repository's metadata registry, using the schema name as the prefix and "unknown" as the namespace. Default value: fail. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: |
| ||
Informational Note: | A harvest process will attempt to scan the metadata of the incoming items (identifier.uri field, to be exact) to see if it looks like a handle. If so, it matches the pattern against the values of this parameter. If there is a match the new item is assigned the handle from the metadata value instead of minting a new one. Default value: hdl.handle.net. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Pattern to reject as an invalid handle prefix (known test string, for example) when attempting to find the handle of harvested items. If there is a match with this config parameter, a new handle will be minted instead. Default value: 123456789. |
...
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Is used by the SolrLogger Client class to connect to the SOLR server over http and perform updates and queries. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Spiders file is utilized by the SolrLogger, this will be populated by running the following command: | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | The following refers to the GeoLiteCity database file utilized by the LocationUtils to calculate the location of client requests based on IP address. During the Ant build process (both fresh_install and update) this file will be downloaded from [http://www.maxmind.com/app/geolitecity] if a new version has been published or it is absent from your | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Timeout for the resolver in the dns DNS lookup time in milliseconds, defaults to 200 for backward compatibility; your systems system's default is usually set in | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Enables access control restriction on DSpace Statistics pages, Restrictions are based on access rights to Community, Collection and Item Pages. This will require the user to sign on to see that statistics. Setting the statistics to "false" will make them publicly available. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | {{solr.statistics.logBots = true }} | ||
Informational Note: | Enable/disable logging of spiders in solr statistics. If false, and IP matches an address in solr.spiderips.urls, event is not logged. If true, event will be logged with the 'isBot' field set to true (see | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Controls solr statistics querying to filter out spider IPs. False by default. | ||
Property: | {{solr.statistics.query.filter.isBot }} | ||
Example Value: | | ||
Informational Note: | Controls solr statistics querying to look at "isBot" field to determin determine if record is a bot. True by default. | ||
Property: | | ||
Example Value: |
| ||
Informational Note: | URLs to download IP addresses of search engine spiders from |
...
...
The _\[dspace\]/config/registries_ directory contains three XML files. These are used to load the _initial_ contents of the Dublin Core Metadata registry and Bitstream Format registry and SWORD metadata registry. After the initial loading (performed by _ant fresh_install_ above), the registries reside in the database; the XML files are not updated.
In order to change the registries, you may adjust the XML files before the first installation of DSpace. On an already running instance it is recommended to change bitstream registries via DSpace admin UI, but the metadata registries can be loaded again at any time from the XML files without difficult. The changes made via admin UI are not reflected in the XML files.
...
...
The bitstream formats recognized by the system and levels of support are similarly stored in the bitstream format registry. This can also be edited at install-time via _\[dspace\]/config/registries/bitstream-formats.xml_ or by the administration Web UI. The contents of the bitstream format registry are entirely up to you, though the system requires that the following two formats are present:
...
Fetch and install the Java^TM^ Java Advanced Imaging Image I/O Tools.
...
Download the jai_imageio library version 1.0_01 or 1.1 found at: https://jai-imageio.dev.java.net/binary-builds.html#Stable_builds .
For these filters you do NOT have to worry about the native code, just the JAR, so choose a download for any platform.
...
The preceding example leaves the JAR in jai_imageio-1_1/lib/jai_imageio.jar . Now install it in your local Maven repository, e.g.: (changing the path after file= if necessary)
Code Block |
---|
mvn install:install-file \
-Dfile=jai_imageio-1_1/lib/jai_imageio.jar \
-DgroupId=com.sun.media \
-DartifactId=jai_imageio \
-Dversion=1.0_01 \
-Dpackaging=jar \
-DgeneratePom=true
|
...
First, be sure there is a value for thumbnail.maxwidth and that it corresponds to the size you want for preview images for the UI, e.g.: (NOTE: this code doesn't pay any attention to thumbnail.maxheight but it's best to set it too so the other thumbnail filters make square images.)
Code Block |
---|
# maximum width and height of generated thumbnails
thumbnail.maxwidth= 80
thumbnail.maxheight = 80 |
Now, add the absolute paths to the XPDF tools you installed. In this example they are installed under /usr/local/bin (a logical place on Linux and MacOSX), but they may be anywhere.
Code Block |
---|
xpdf.path.pdftotext = /usr/local/bin/pdftotext
xpdf.path.pdftoppm = /usr/local/bin/pdftoppm
xpdf.path.pdfinfo = /usr/local/bin/pdfinfo |
Change the MediaFilter plugin configuration to remove the old org.dspace.app.mediafilter.PDFFilter and add the new filters, e.g: (New sections are in bold)
Code Block |
---|
Code Block |
filter.plugins = \ PDF Text Extractor, \ PDF Thumbnail, \ HTML Text Extractor, \ Word Text Extractor, \ JPEG Thumbnail plugin.named.org.dspace.app.mediafilter.FormatFilter = \ org.dspace.app.mediafilter.XPDF2Text = PDF Text Extractor, \ org.dspace.app.mediafilter.XPDF2Thumbnail = PDF Thumbnail, \ org.dspace.app.mediafilter.HTMLFilter = HTML Text Extractor, \ org.dspace.app.mediafilter.WordFilter = Word Text Extractor, \ org.dspace.app.mediafilter.JPEGFilter = JPEG Thumbnail, \ org.dspace.app.mediafilter.BrandedPreviewJPEGFilter = Branded Preview JPEG |
Then add the input format configuration properties for each of the new filters, e.g.:
...
Finally, if you want PDF thumbnail images, don't forget to add that filter name to the filter.plugins property, e.g.:
Code Block |
---|
filter.plugins = PDF Thumbnail, PDF Text Extractor, ... |
Follow your usual DSpace installation/update procedure, only add -Pxpdf-mediafilter-support to the Maven invocation:
Code Block |
---|
mvn -Pxpdf-mediafilter-support package ant -Dconfig=etc. ...\[dspace\]/config/dspace.cfg update |
...
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | The property key tell the SWORD METS implementation which package ingester to use to install deposited content. This should refer to one of the classes configured for:
The value of sword.mets-ingester.package-ingester tells the system which named plugin for this interface should be used to ingest SWORD METS packages. | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | Define the metadata type EPDCX (EPrints DC XML)to be handled by the SWORD crosswalk configuration. | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | Define the stylesheet which will be used by the self-named XSLTIngestionCrosswalk class when asked to load the SWORD configuration (as specified above). This will use the specified stylesheet to crosswalk the incoming SWAP metadata to the DIM format for ingestion. | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | The base URL of the SWORD deposit. This is the URL from which DSpace will construct the deposit location urls URLs for collections. The default is {dspace.urlbaseUrl}/sword/deposit. In the event that you are not deploying DSpace as the ROOT application in the servlet container, this will generate incorrect URLs, and you should override the functionality by specifying in full as shown in the example value. | |||
Properties: | {{sword.servicedocument.url }} | |||
Example Value: | {{sword.servicedocument.url = http://www.myu.ac.uk/sword/servicedocument_ | |||
Informational Note: | The base URL of the SWORD service document. This is the URL from which DSpace will construct the service document location urls URLs for the site, and for individual collections. The default is {dspace.urlbaseUrl}/sword/servicedocument . In the event that you are not deploying DSpace as the ROOT application in the servlet container, this will generate incorrect URLs, and you should override the functionality by specifying in full as shown in the example value. | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | The base URL of the SWORD media links. This is the URL which DSpace will use to construct the media link urls URLs for items which are deposited via sword. The default is { | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | <ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="9c8bfcc6-07a6-4bab-9d18-d28a2ebe498f"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ | ||
Informational Note: | The URL which identifies the sword software which provides the sword interface. This is the URL which DSpace will use to fill out the atom:generator element of its atom documents. The default is: {{[http://www.dspace.org/ns/sword/1.3.1_ | [http://www.dspace.org/ns/sword/1.3.1_]]}}. If you have modified your sword software, you should change this URI to identify your own version. If you are using the standard dspace-sword module you will not, in general, need to change this setting. ]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro> | ||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | The metadata field in which to store the updated date for items deposited via SWORD. | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | The metadata field in which to store the value of the slug header if it is supplied. | |||
Properties: |
| |||
Example Value: |
| |||
Informational Note: | The accept packaging properties, along with their associated quality values where appropriate. This is a Global Setting; these will be used on all DSpace collections | |||
Properties: |
| |||
Example Value: |
| |||
Informational Note: | Collection Specific settings: these will be used on the collections with the given handles. | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | Should the server offer up items in collections as sword deposit targets. This will be effected by placing a URI in the collection description which will list all the allowed items for the depositing user in that collection on request. NOTE: this will require an implementation of deposit onto items, which will not be forthcoming for a short while. | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | Should the server offer as the default the list of all Communities to a Service Document request. If false, the server will offer the list of all collections, which is the default and recommended behavior at this stage. NOTE: a service document for Communities will not offer any viable deposit targets, and the client will need to request the list of Collections in the target before deposit can continue. | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | The maximum upload size of a package through the sword interface, in bytes. This will be the combined size of all the files, the metadata and any manifest data. It is NOT the same as the maximum size set for an individual file upload through the user interface. If not set, or set to 0, the sword service will default to no limit. | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | Whether or not DSpace should store a copy of the original sword deposit package. NOTE: this will cause the deposit process to run slightly slower, and will accelerate the rate at which the repository consumes disk space. BUT, it will also mean that the deposited packages are recoverable in their original form. It is strongly recommended, therefore, to leave this option turned on. When set to "true", this requires that the configuration option upload.temp.dir above is set to a valid location. | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | The bundle name that SWORD should store incoming packages under if sword.keep-original-package is set to true. The default is "SWORD" if not value is set | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | Should the server identify the sword version in a deposit response. It is recommended to leave this unchanged. | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | Should mediated deposit via sword be supported. If enabled, this will allow users to deposit content packages on behalf of other users. | |||
Properties: |
| |||
Example Value: |
| <ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="97c84e77-a036-4b1b-b49d-9494a5bdf4f1"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ | ||
Informational Note: | Configure the plugins to process incoming packages. The form of this configuration is as per the Plugin Manager's Named Plugin documentation: {{plugin.named.[interface] = [implementation] = [package format identifier] }}. Package ingesters should implement the SWORDIngester interface, and will be loaded when a package of the format specified above in: {{sword.accept-packaging.[package format].identifier = [package format identifier]}}is received. In the event that this is a simple file deposit, with no package format, then the class named by "SimpleFileIngester" will be loaded and executed where appropriate. This case will only occur when a single file is being deposited into an existing DSpace Item. ]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro> | |||
Properties: | | |||
Example Value: | | |||
Informational Note: | A comma separated list of MIME types that SWORD will accept. |