The DSpace digital repository supports two user interfaces: one based on JavaServer Pages (JSP) technologies and one based upon the Apache Cocoon framework (XMLUI). This chapter describes those parameters which are specific to the Manakin (XMLUI) interface based upon the Cocoon framework.
For a more detailed overview of XMLUI/Manakin, see the following resources:
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The XMLUI (aka Manakin) is built on Apache Cocoon framework. The XMLUI uses Cocoon to provide a modular, extendable, tiered interface framework
The XMLUI essentially consists of three main tiers, in increasing order of complexity:
These tiers are very important and powerful because of their modularity. For example, based on your local expertise with these technologies, your institution may decide to only modify the XMLUI at the "Style Tier" (by just modifying CSS & images in an existing theme). As you learn more about themes & aspects, you may decide to slowly venture into the more complex "Theme Tier" and finally into the "Aspect Tier". Other institutions may determine that all they really need to ever do is make "Style Tier" changes.
Digging in a little deeper, there are three main XMLUI components that are unique to the XMLUI and used throughout the system. These main components are:
One of the harder things to initially grasp in the XMLUI is how a single user's request (e.g. clicking on a link or button) flows through the entire system of enabled Aspects and Themes. Understanding this flow is also very important as you work to build your own Aspects (or complex Themes), as it may allow you to more easily determine what is going on in the system.
Before getting started, it's worth mentioning that this request flow is controlled via a series of Cocoon Sitemap files (named sitemap.xmap, themes.xmap and aspects.xmap). These Sitemap files are Cocoon's way of defining the flow. More information about Cocoon Sitemaps is available at: http://cocoon.apache.org/2.1/userdocs/concepts/sitemap.html
The following explanation provides a high level overview of how a request is processed, how a DRI document is generated (via Aspects), and then how it is transformed into XHTML (via Themes). As this is a high level overview, some details are likely left out, but the overarching flow is what is most important.
sitemap.xmap
(located at [xmlui]/sitemap.xmap
). This is the main entry point for all requests[xmlui]/themes/themes.xmap
file, which controls all the Themes.themes.xmap
file will then load all "matching" themes which are configured in your [dspace]/config/xmlui.xconf
file (see #Themes below).sitemap.xmap
file (located in its theme directory) is loaded and processed.The theme's sitemap.xmap
is in charge of actually loading the theme's XSLT, CSS, etc. However, before it does that, you'll notice it makes a call to generate the DRI document for the current page as follows:
<map:generate type="file" src="cocoon://DRI/{1}"/> |
sitemap.xmap
(remember how we said that this sitemap is the main entry point for all requests).[xmlui]/aspects/aspects.xmap
file to be loaded. As the name suggests, this file obviously controls all the Aspects.aspects.xmap
file will then load all enabled Aspects which are configured in your [dspace]/config/xmlui.xconf
file (see #Aspects below).sitemap.xmap
is loaded & processeddspace-xmlui-api.jar
file. However, if you have a copy of DSpace source handy, it can be found in: [dspace-src]/dspace-xmlui/dspace-xmlui-api/src/main/resources/aspects/[name-of-aspect]/
or in DSpace 3 and newer in [dspace-src]/dspace-xmlui/src/main/resources/aspects/[name-of-aspect]/
xmlui.xconf
). Each aspect may add, remove or change content within the DRI document. After the final aspect is finished processing, the DRI document is complete.sitemap.xmap
(remember, this is the same location that triggered the loading of the Aspects in the first place).sitemap.xmap
will continue its processing. Generally speaking, most themes will then perform one or more XSLT transformations (to transform the final DRI document into XHTML). They also may load up one or more CSS files to help stylize the final XHTML.Again, the above flow is a slightly simplified version of what is going on underneath the XMLUI. As you can see, Cocoon Sitemaps are what control most of the XMLUI processing (and the loading of the Aspects and Theme).
In an effort to save the programmer/administrator some time, the configuration table below is taken from 5.3.43. XMLUI Specific Configuration.
Property: | xmlui.supportedLocales |
Example Value: | xmlui.supportedLocales = en, de |
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: | xmlui.force.ssl |
Example Value: | xmlui.force.ssl = true |
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: | xmlui.user.registration |
Example Value: | xmlui.user.registration = true |
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: | xmlui.user.editmetadata |
Example Value: | xmlui.user.editmetadata = true |
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: | xmlui.user.assumelogin |
Example Value: | xmlui.user.assumelogin = true |
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: | xmlui.user.loginredirect |
Example Value: | xmlui.user.loginredirect = /profile |
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: | xmlui.theme.allowoverrides |
Example Value: | xmlui.theme.allowoverrides = false |
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: | xmlui.bundle.upload |
Example Value: | xmlui.bundle.upload = ORIGINAL, METADATA, THUMBNAIL, LICENSE, CC_LICENSE |
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: | xmlui.community-list.render.full |
Example Value: | xmlui.community-list.render.full = true |
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: | xmlui.community-list.cache |
Example Value: | xmlui.community-list.cache = 12 hours |
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: | xmlui.bistream.mods |
Example Value: | xmlui.bistream.mods = true |
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: | xmlui.bitstream.mets |
Example Value: | xmlui.bitstream.mets = true |
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: | xmlui.google.analytics.key |
Example Value: | xmlui.google.analytics.key = UA-XXXXXX-X |
Informational Note: | If you would like to use google 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 snipit of javascript code to place on your site, inside that snip it is your 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: | xmlui.controlpanel.activity.max |
Example Value: | xmlui.controlpanel.activity.max = 250 |
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: | xmlui.controlpanel.activity.ipheader |
Example Value: | xmlui.controlpanel.activity.ipheader = X-Forward-For |
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. |
The Manakin user interface is composed of two distinct components: aspects and themes. Manakin aspects are like extensions or plugins for Manakin; they are interactive components that modify existing features or provide new features for the digital repository. Manakin themes stylize the look-and-feel of the repository, community, or collection.
The repository administrator is able to define which aspects and themes are installed for the particular repository by editing the [dspace]/config/xmlui.xconf configuration file. The xmlui.xconf file consists of two major sections: Aspects and Themes.
The <aspects> section defines the "Aspect Chain", or the linear set of aspects that are installed in the repository. For each aspect that is installed in the repository, the aspect makes available new features to the interface. For example, if the "submission" aspect were to be commented out or removed from the xmlui.xconf, then users would not be able to submit new items into the repository (even the links and language prompting users to submit items are removed). Each <aspect> element has two attributes, name and path. The name is used to identify the Aspect, while the path determines the directory where the aspect's code is located. Here is the default aspect configuration:
<aspects> <aspect name="Displaying Artifacts" path="resource://aspects/ViewArtifacts/" /> <aspect name="Browsing Artifacts" path="resource://aspects/BrowseArtifacts/" /> <aspect name="Searching Artifacts" path="resource://aspects/SearchArtifacts/" /> <aspect name="Administration" path="resource://aspects/Administrative/" /> <aspect name="E-Person" path="resource://aspects/EPerson/" /> <aspect name="Submission and Workflow" path="resource://aspects/Submission/" /> <aspect name="Statistics" path="resource://aspects/Statistics/" /> <aspect name="Original Workflow" path="resource://aspects/Workflow/" /> </aspects> |
A standard distribution of Manakin/DSpace includes eight "core" aspects:
Following Aspects are optional
Following Aspects are deprecated and shouldn't be used anymore at all
The <themes> section defines a set of "rules" that determine where themes are installed in the repository. Each rule is processed in the order that it appears, and the first rule that matches determines the theme that is applied (so order is important). Each rule consists of a <theme> element with several possible attributes:
handle (either regex and/or handle is required)The handle attribute determines which community, collection, or item the theme should apply to.
If you use the "handle" attribute, the effect is cascading, meaning if a rule is established for a community then all collections and items within that community will also have this theme apply to them as well. Here is an example configuration:
<themes> <theme name="Theme 1" handle="123456789/23" path="theme1/"/> <theme name="Theme 2" regex="community-list" path="theme2/"/> <theme name="Reference Theme" regex=".*" path="Reference/"/> </themes> |
In the example above three themes are configured: "Theme 1", "Theme 2", and the "Reference Theme". The first rule specifies that "Theme 1" will apply to all communities, collections, or items that are contained under the parent community "123456789/23". The next rule specifies any URL containing the string "community-list" will get "Theme 2". The final rule, using the regular expression ".", will match *anything, so all pages which have not matched one of the preceding rules will be matched to the Reference Theme.
The XMLUI user interface supports multiple languages through the use of internationalization catalogues as defined by the Cocoon Internationalization Transformer. Each catalog contains the translation of all user-displayed strings into a particular language or variant. Each catalog is a single xml file whose name is based upon the language it is designated for, thus:
messages_language_country_variant.xml
messages_language_country.xml
messages_language.xml
messages.xml
The interface will automatically determine which file to select based upon the user's browser and system configuration. For example, if the user's browser is set to Australian English then first the system will check if messages_en_au.xml is available. If this translation is not available it will fall back to messages_en.xml, and finally if that is not available, messages.xml.
DSpace XMLUI supplies an English only translation of the interface, which can be found in the XMLUI web application ([dspace]/webapps/xmlui/i18n/messages.xml
), after you first build DSpace.
If you wish to add other translations to the system, or make customizations to the existing messages.xml file, you can place them in the following directory:
[dspace-source]/dspace/modules/xmlui/src/main/webapp/i18n/ |
After rebuilding DSpace, any messages files placed in this directory will be automatically included in the XMLUI web application (and files of the same name will override any default files). By default this full directory path may not exist (if not, just create it) or may be empty. You can place any number of translation catalogues in this directory. To add additional translations, just add alternative versions of the messages.xml file in specific language and country variants as needed for your installation.
To set a language other than English as the default language for the repository's interface, you can simply rename the translation catalogue for the new default language to "messages.xml".
Again, note that you will need to rebuild DSpace for these changes to take effect in your installed XMLUI web application!
For more information about the [dspace-source]/dspace/modules/
directory, and how it may be used to "overlay" (or customize) the default XMLUI interface, classes and files, please see: Advanced Customisation
Manakin themes stylize the look-and-feel of the repository, community, or collection and are distributed as self-contained packages. A Manakin/DSpace installation may have multiple themes installed and available to be used in different parts of the repository. The central component of a theme is the sitemap.xmap, which defines what resources are available to the theme such as XSL stylesheets, CSS stylesheets, images, or multimedia files.
1) Create theme skeleton
Most theme developers do not create a new theme from scratch; instead they start from the standard theme template, which defines a skeleton structure for a theme. The template is located at: [dspace-source]/dspace-xmlui/src/main/webbapp/themes/template
(in DSpace 1.8 and older the path is [dspace-source]/dspace-xmlui/dspace-xmlui-webbapp/src/main/webbapp/themes/template). To start your new theme simply copy the theme template into your locally defined modules directory, [dspace-source]/dspace/modules/xmlui/src/main/webbapp/themes/[your theme's directory]/.
2) Modify theme variables
The next step is to modify the theme's parameters so that the theme knows where it is located. Open the [your theme's directory]/sitemap.xmap and look for <global-variables>
<global-variables> <theme-path>[your theme's directory]</theme-path> <theme-name>[your theme's name]</theme-name> </global-variables> |
Update both the theme's path to the directory name you created in step one. The theme's name is used only for documentation.
3) Add your CSS stylesheets
The base theme template will produce a repository interface without any style - just plain XHTML with no color or formatting. To make your theme useful you will need to supply a CSS Stylesheet that creates your desired look-and-feel. Add your new CSS stylesheets:
[your theme's directory]/lib/style.css (The base style sheet used for all browsers)
[your theme's directory]/lib/style-ie.css (Specific stylesheet used for internet explorer)
4) Install theme and rebuild DSpace
Next rebuild and deploy DSpace (replace <version> with the your current release):
Rebuild the DSpace installation package by running the following command from your [dspace-source]/dspace/directory:
mvn package |
Update all DSpace webapps to [dspace]/webapps by running the following command from your [dspace-source]/dspace/target/dspace-[version]-build.dirdirectory:
ant -Dconfig=[dspace]/config/dspace.cfg update |
Deploy the the new webapps:
cp -R /[dspace]/webapps/* /[tomcat]/webapps |
The XMLUI "news" document is only shown on the root page of your repository. It was intended to provide the title and introductory message, but you may use it for anything.
The news document is located at [dspace]/dspace/config/news-xmlui.xml. There is only one version; it is localized by inserting "i18n" callouts into the text areas. It must be a complete and valid XML DRI document (see Chapter 15).
Its (the News document) exact rendering in the XHTML UI depends, of course, on the theme. The default content is designed to operate with the reference themes, so when you modify it, be sure to preserve the tag structure and e.g. the exact attributes of the first DIV tag. Also note that the text is DRI, not HTML, so you must use only DRI tags, such as the XREF tag to construct a link.
Example 1: a single language:
<document> <body> <div id="file.news.div.news" n="news" rend="primary"> <head> TITLE OF YOUR REPOSITORY HERE </head> <p> INTRO MESSAGE HERE Welcome to my wonderful repository etc etc ... A service of <xref target="http://myuni.edu/">My University</xref> </p> </div> </body> <options/> <meta> <userMeta/> <pageMeta/> <repositoryMeta/> </meta> </document> |
Example 2: all text replaced by references to localizable message keys:
<document> <body> <div id="file.news.div.news" n="news" rend="primary"> <head><i18n:text>myuni.repo.title</i18n:text></head> <p> <i18n:text>myuni.repo.intro</i18n:text> <i18n:text>myuni.repo.a.service.of</i18n:text> <xref target="http://myuni.edu/"><i18n:text>myuni.name</i18n:text></xref> </p> </div> </body> <options/> <meta> <userMeta/> <pageMeta/> <repositoryMeta/> </meta> </document> |
The XMLUI user interface supports the addition of globally static content (as well as static content within individual themes).
Globally static content can be placed in the [dspace-source]/dspace/modules/xmlui/src/main/webapp/static/ directory. By default this directory only contains the default robots.txt file, which provides helpful site information to web spiders/crawlers. However, you may also add static HTML (*.html) content to this directory, as needed for your installation.
Any static HTML content you add to this directory may also reference static content (e.g. CSS, Javascript, Images, etc.) from the same [dspace-source]/dspace/modules/xmlui/src/main/webapp/static/ directory. You may reference other static content from your static HTML files similar to the following:
<link href="./static/mystyle.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"/> <img src="./static/images/static-image.gif" alt="Static image in /static/images/ directory"/> <img src="./static/static-image.jpg" alt="Static image in /static/ directory"/> |
This feature allows you to harvest Items (both metadata and bitstreams) from one DSpace to another DSpace or from one OAI-PMH/OAI-ORE server to a DSpace instance.
This section will give the necessary steps to set up the OAI-ORE/OAI-PMH Harvester from the XMLUI (Manakin). This feature is currently not available in the JSPUI.
Setting up a Harvesting Collection:
http://dspace.url/oai/request
For example, you could use the Demo DSpace OAI-PMH provider: "http://demo.dspace.org/oai/request"hdl_<handle-prefix>_<handle-suffix>
. For example "hdl_10673_2" would refer to the Collection whose handle is "10673/2" (on the DSpace Demo Server, this is the Collection of Sample Items). If the target instance is using OAI 2.0 (DSpace 3.0 or the OAI 2.0 addon for DSpace 1.8.2), replace "hdl_" with "col_" if the set is a collection or with "com_" if it's a community.ListMetadataFormats
request to that OAI-PMH server. Typically this has the format: http://dspace.url/oai/request?verb=ListMetadataFormats
For example, you can see which metadata formats are supported by the DSpace Demo Server by visiting: http://demo.dspace.org/oai/request?verb=ListMetadataFormatsAt this point the settings are saved and the menu changes to provide three options:
Import Now: performs a single harvest from the remote collection into the local one. Success, notes, and errors encountered in the process will be reflected in the "Last Harvest Result" entry. More detailed information is available in the DSpace log.
Note that the whole harvest cycle is executed within a single HTTP request and will time out for large collections. For this reason, it is advisable to use the automatic harvest scheduler set up either in XMLUI or from the command line. If the scheduler is running, "Import Now" will handle the harvest task as a separate thread. |
Setting up automatic harvesting in the Control Panel Screen.
dspace.cfg
using the harvester.harvestFrequency
parameter.Useful links with further information into XMLUI Development