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This is the September 2020 edition of the Fedora Newsletter. This newsletter summarizes the most significant activities within the Fedora community over the last month.

News

IMLS Grant Work Begins: Fedora Migration Paths and Tools

This month marks the beginning of the IMLS-funded Fedora Migration Paths and Tools project, which seeks to bring the community forward to a modern, supported version of Fedora via migration tools, documentation, guides, best practices, and other pathways. The first phase of the grant focuses on two pilot migrations, the first at the University of Virginia and the second at Whitman College. The grant team will meet with each pilot institution this month to kick-off the project and establish roles, responsibilities, goals, and timelines. Stay tuned for more information as the grant work progresses!

Register: Online Fedora Users Group Meeting

The second Online Fedora Users Group Meeting, this time based around European timezones will take place on September 9. This meeting is free and open to anyone who would like to attend; it will provide an opportunity for members of the Fedora community to connect, share information, and provide updates on local projects and initiatives. 

To attend the meeting please register in advance. Sessions will be recorded and shared after the meeting.

Slides and Recordings: Online Fedora Users Group Meeting - American Timezones

The first Online Fedora Users Group Meeting (based around American timezones) is now complete. The meeting was well-attended, with between 35 and 45 participants throughout the two day event. Slides are notes are available on the wiki, and all the video recordings have been uploaded to YouTube. Feel free to share these resources with your colleagues.

Fedora Sprints

A Fedora code sprint took place August 3-7. The accomplishments include:

  1. Support for the creation of external binary files
  2. Progress on the Fedora 4 & 5 to Fedora 6 migration tooling
  3. Search service refinements.

The current sprint takes place August 31 - September 4. The goals include:

  1. Fedora 4 & 5 → Fedora 6 migration (upgrade-utils)
  2. Integrate fcrepo-storage-ocfl into core
  3. Fedora API Alignment
    1. Prefer header (Inbound references)
    2. Direct and Indirect Container Support
    3. * Valkyrie verification

Through December of 2020 we will be holding one-week-long Fedora 6 mini-sprints during the first week of each month.

This will allow for consistent progress towards the Fedora 6 release, as well as a clear schedule for you to plan towards. If you miss one month, you can join the next!

The next sprint will take place October 5-9. Please add your name to any of the upcoming sprint dates on the wiki.

Activities in Related Communities

Islandora

Samvera

Oxford Common File Layout

The latest OCFL community meeting took place on July 8. Notes and audio from the call are available online. The meeting focused on community updates from Indiana University, University of Technology Sydney, University of Maryland, Fedora, and Samvera, the release of OCFL 1.0, composition of the editorial team, and Interest in defining community policies for merging community extensions. The next community call will take place on September 9th.

Conferences and events

In an attempt to simplify the task of keeping up with Fedora-related meetings and events, a Fedora calendar is available to the community as HTML  and iCal .

If you have not already joined the fedora-project Slack workspace please start by visiting the self-registration form. Come join the conversation!

Online Fedora Users Group Meeting

The second Online Fedora Users Group Meeting will take place on September 9. This meeting is free and open to anyone who would like to attend; it will provide an opportunity for members of the Fedora community to connect, share information, and provide updates on local projects and initiatives. To attend the meeting please register in advance. Sessions will be recorded and shared after the meeting.

Membership

Fedora is funded entirely through the contributions of members that allocate their annual funding to Fedora. This funding supports full-time staff to work on Fedora and provide technical leadership, direct strategic planning, organize community outreach, and coordinate timely software releases. Membership also provides opportunities to participate in project governance and influence the direction of the software. If your institution is not yet a member in support of Fedora, please join us today!

Register Your Repository

Is your repository listed in the registry? Help us maintain reliable information on the community of Fedora users around the world by registering your repository today. You can also request an update to an existing entry by selecting your entry and filling out the online form. 

Get Involved

Fedora is designed, built, used, and supported by the community. An easy and important way that you can contribute to the effort is by helping resolve outstanding bugs. If you have an interest in gaining a better understanding of the Fedora code base, or a specific interest in any of these bugs, please add a comment to a ticket and we can work together to move your interest forward.

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