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-rw-r--r--guide/src/SUMMARY.md3
-rw-r--r--guide/src/bulk_exports.md22
-rw-r--r--guide/src/data_model.md168
-rw-r--r--guide/src/http_api.md50
-rw-r--r--guide/src/implementation.md25
-rw-r--r--guide/src/overview.md101
l---------guide/src/rfc.md1
-rw-r--r--guide/src/roadmap.md45
-rw-r--r--guide/src/scope.md64
-rw-r--r--guide/src/workflow.md36
10 files changed, 512 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/guide/src/SUMMARY.md b/guide/src/SUMMARY.md
index 6a23f7fe..736bb2cf 100644
--- a/guide/src/SUMMARY.md
+++ b/guide/src/SUMMARY.md
@@ -2,9 +2,10 @@
- [Fatcat Overview](./overview.md)
- [Data Model](./data_model.md)
+ - [Workflow](./workflow.md)
- [Sources](./sources.md)
- [Implementation](./implementation.md)
- - [Original Design Document](./rfc.md)
+ - [Roadmap](./roadmap.md)
- [Cataloging Style Guide](./style_guide.md)
- [Entity Field Reference](./entity_fields.md)
- [Public API](./http_api.md)
diff --git a/guide/src/bulk_exports.md b/guide/src/bulk_exports.md
index aaf236f2..0aac4475 100644
--- a/guide/src/bulk_exports.md
+++ b/guide/src/bulk_exports.md
@@ -1 +1,23 @@
# Bulk Exports
+
+There are a few different database dump formats folks might want:
+
+- raw native database backups, for disaster recovery (would include
+ volatile/unsupported schema details, user API credentials, full history,
+ in-process edits, comments, etc)
+- a sanitized version of the above: roughly per-table dumps of the full state
+ of the database. Could use per-table SQL expressions with sub-queries to pull
+ in small tables ("partial transform") and export JSON for each table; would
+ be extra work to maintain, so not pursuing for now.
+- full history, full public schema exports, in a form that might be used to
+ mirror or enitrely fork the project. Propose supplying the full "changelog"
+ in API schema format, in a single file to capture all entity history, without
+ "hydrating" any inter-entity references. Rely on separate dumps of
+ non-entity, non-versioned tables (editors, abstracts, etc). Note that a
+ variant of this could use the public interface, in particular to do
+ incremental updates (though that wouldn't capture schema changes).
+- transformed exports of the current state of the database (aka, without
+ history). Useful for data analysis, search engines, etc. Propose supplying
+ just the Release table in a fully "hydrated" state to start. Unclear if
+ should be on a work or release basis; will go with release for now. Harder to
+ do using public interface because of the need for transaction locking.
diff --git a/guide/src/data_model.md b/guide/src/data_model.md
index 008c096a..b2a02688 100644
--- a/guide/src/data_model.md
+++ b/guide/src/data_model.md
@@ -1 +1,169 @@
# Data Model
+
+## Identifiers
+
+A fixed number of first-class "entities" are defined, with common behavior and
+schema layouts. These are all be semantic entities like "work", "release",
+"container", and "creator".
+
+fatcat identifiers are semantically meaningless fixed-length random numbers,
+usually represented in case-insensitive base32 format. Each entity type has its
+own identifier namespace.
+
+128-bit (UUID size) identifiers encode as 26 characters (but note that not all
+such strings decode to valid UUIDs), and in the backend can be serialized in
+UUID columns:
+
+ work_rzga5b9cd7efgh04iljk8f3jvz
+ https://fatcat.wiki/work/rzga5b9cd7efgh04iljk8f3jvz
+
+In comparison, 96-bit identifiers would have 20 characters and look like:
+
+ work_rzga5b9cd7efgh04iljk
+ https://fatcat.wiki/work/rzga5b9cd7efgh04iljk
+
+A 64-bit namespace would probably be large enought, and would work with
+database Integer columns:
+
+ work_rzga5b9cd7efg
+ https://fatcat.wiki/work/rzga5b9cd7efg
+
+The idea would be to only have fatcat identifiers be used to interlink between
+databases, *not* to supplant DOIs, ISBNs, handle, ARKs, and other "registered"
+persistent identifiers.
+
+## Entities and Internal Schema
+
+Internally, identifiers would be lightweight pointers to "revisions" of an
+entity. Revisions are stored in their complete form, not as a patch or
+difference; if comparing to distributed version control systems, this is the
+git model, not the mercurial model.
+
+The entity revisions are immutable once accepted; the editting process involves
+the creation of new entity revisions and, if the edit is approved, pointing the
+identifier to the new revision. Entities cross-reference between themselves by
+*identifier* not *revision number*. Identifier pointers also support
+(versioned) deletion and redirects (for merging entities).
+
+Edit objects represent a change to a single entity; edits get batched together
+into edit groups (like "commits" and "pull requests" in git parlance).
+
+SQL tables would probably look something like the (but specific to each entity
+type, with tables like `work_revision` not `entity_revision`):
+
+ entity_ident
+ id (uuid)
+ current_revision (entity_revision foreign key)
+ redirect_id (optional; points to another entity_ident)
+
+ entity_revision
+ revision_id
+ <entity-specific fields>
+ extra: json blob for schema evolution
+
+ entity_edit
+ timestamp
+ editgroup_id
+ ident (entity_ident foreign key)
+ new_revision (entity_revision foreign key)
+ previous_revision (optional; points to entity_revision)
+ extra: json blob for progeny metadata
+
+ editgroup
+ editor_id
+ description
+ extra: json blob for progeny metadata
+
+Additional entity-specific columns would hold actual metadata. Additional
+tables (which would reference both `entity_revision` and `entity_id` foreign
+keys as appropriate) would represent things like authorship relationships
+(creator/release), citations between works, etc. Every revision of an entity
+would require duplicating all of these associated rows, which could end up
+being a large source of inefficiency, but is necessary to represent the full
+history of an object.
+
+## Ontology
+
+Loosely following FRBR (Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records), but
+removing the "manifestation" abstraction, and favoring files (digital
+artifacts) over physical items, the primary entities are:
+
+ work
+ <a stub, for grouping releases>
+
+ release (aka "edition", "variant")
+ title
+ volume/pages/issue/chapter
+ media/formfactor
+ publication/peer-review status
+ language
+ <published> date
+ <variant-of> work
+ <published-in> container
+ <has-contributors> creator
+ <citation-to> release
+ <has> identifier
+
+ file (aka "digital artifact")
+ <instantiates> release
+ hashes/checksums
+ mimetype
+ <found-at> URLs
+
+ creator (aka "author")
+ name
+ identifiers
+ aliases
+
+ container (aka "venue", "serial", "title")
+ name
+ open-access policy
+ peer-review policy
+ <has> aliases, acronyms
+ <about> subject/category
+ <has> identifier
+ <published-in> container
+ <published-by> publisher
+
+## Controlled Vocabularies
+
+Some special namespace tables and enums would probably be helpful; these could
+live in the database (not requiring a database migration to update), but should
+have more controlled editing workflow... perhaps versioned in the codebase:
+
+- identifier namespaces (DOI, ISBN, ISSN, ORCID, etc; but not the identifers
+ themselves)
+- subject categorization
+- license and open access status
+- work "types" (article vs. book chapter vs. proceeding, etc)
+- contributor types (author, translator, illustrator, etc)
+- human languages
+- file mimetypes
+
+These could also be enforced by QA bots that review all editgroups.
+
+## Entity States
+
+ wip (not live; not redirect; has rev)
+ activate
+ active (live; not redirect; has rev)
+ redirect
+ delete
+ redirect (live; redirect; rev or not)
+ split
+ delete
+ deleted (live; not redirect; no rev)
+ redirect
+ activate
+
+ "wip redirect" or "wip deleted" are invalid states
+
+## Global Edit Changelog
+
+As part of the process of "accepting" an edit group, a row would be written to
+an immutable, append-only log table (which internally could be a SQL table)
+documenting each identifier change. This changelog establishes a monotonically
+increasing version number for the entire corpus, and should make interaction
+with other systems easier (eg, search engines, replicated databases,
+alternative storage backends, notification frameworks, etc.).
+
diff --git a/guide/src/http_api.md b/guide/src/http_api.md
index 5b38339f..5769533d 100644
--- a/guide/src/http_api.md
+++ b/guide/src/http_api.md
@@ -13,6 +13,41 @@ All API traffic is over HTTPS; there is no insecure HTTP endpoint, even for
read-only operations. To start, all endpoints accept and return only JSON
serialized content.
+## Entity Endpoints/Actions
+
+Actions could, in theory, be directed at any of:
+
+ entities (ident)
+ revision
+ edit
+
+A design decision to be made is how much to abstract away the distinction
+between these three types (particularly the identifier/revision distinction).
+
+Top-level entity actions (resulting in edits):
+
+ create (new rev)
+ redirect
+ split
+ update (new rev)
+ delete
+
+On existing entity edits (within a group):
+
+ update
+ delete
+
+An edit group as a whole can be:
+
+ create
+ submit
+ accept
+
+Other per-entity endpoints:
+
+ match (by field/context)
+ lookup (by external persistent identifier)
+
## Editgroups
All mutating entity operations (create, update, delete) accept an
@@ -46,6 +81,21 @@ authentication using an HTTP Bearer token. If you can't generate such a token
from the web interface (because that feature hasn't been implemented), look for
a public demo token for experimentation, or ask an administrator for a token.
+## Autoaccept Flag
+
+Currently only on batch creation (POST) for entities.
+
+For all bulk operations, optional 'editgroup' query parameter overrides
+individual editgroup parameters.
+
+If autoaccept flag is set and editgroup is not, a new editgroup is
+automatically created and overrides for all entities inserted. Note
+that this is different behavior from the "use current or create new"
+default behavior for regular creation.
+
+Unfortunately, "true" and "false" are the only values acceptable for boolean
+rust/openapi2 query parameters
+
## QA Instance
The intent is to run a public "sandbox" QA instance of the catalog, using a
diff --git a/guide/src/implementation.md b/guide/src/implementation.md
index d2557ff7..df8d66b9 100644
--- a/guide/src/implementation.md
+++ b/guide/src/implementation.md
@@ -1 +1,26 @@
# Implementation
+
+The canonical backend datastore exposes a microservice-like HTTP API, which
+could be extended with gRPC or GraphQL interfaces. The initial datastore is a
+transactional SQL database, but this implementation detail is abstracted by the
+API.
+
+As little "application logic" as possible should be embedded in this back-end;
+as much as possible would be pushed to bots which could be authored and
+operated by anybody. A separate web interface project talks to the API backend
+and can be developed more rapidly with less concern about data loss or
+corruption.
+
+A cronjob will creae periodic database dumps, both in "full" form (all tables
+and all edit history, removing only authentication credentials) and "flattened"
+form (with only the most recent version of each entity).
+
+A goal is to be linked-data/RDF/JSON-LD/semantic-web "compatible", but not
+necessarily "first". It should be possible to export the database in a
+relatively clean RDF form, and to fetch data in a variety of formats, but
+internally fatcat will not be backed by a triple-store, and will not be bound
+to a rigid third-party ontology or schema.
+
+Microservice daemons should be able to proxy between the primary API and
+standard protocols like ResourceSync and OAI-PMH, and third party bots could
+ingest or synchronize the databse in those formats.
diff --git a/guide/src/overview.md b/guide/src/overview.md
index bc08ce1e..8e6279ed 100644
--- a/guide/src/overview.md
+++ b/guide/src/overview.md
@@ -1,3 +1,102 @@
# Fatcat Overview
-For now, see the [RFC](https://fatcat.wiki).
+fatcat is an open bibliographic catalog of written works. The scope of works
+is somewhat flexible, with a focus on published research outputs like journal
+articles, pre-prints, and conference proceedings. Records are collaboratively
+editable, versioned, available in bulk form, and include URL-agnostic
+file-level metadata.
+
+fatcat is currently used internally at the Internet Archive, but interested
+folks are welcome to contribute to design and development.
+
+## Goals and Ecosystem Niche
+
+For the Internet Archive use case, fatcat has two primary use cases:
+
+- Track the "completeness" of our holdings against all known published works.
+ In particular, allow us to monitor and prioritize further collection work.
+- Be a public-facing catalog and access mechanism for our open access holdings.
+
+In the larger ecosystem, fatcat could also provide:
+
+- A work-level (as opposed to title-level) archival dashboard: what fraction of
+ all published works are preserved in archives? KBART, CLOCKSS, Portico, and
+ other preservations don't provide granular metadata
+- A collaborative, independent, non-commercial, fully-open, field-agnostic,
+ "completeness"-oriented catalog of scholarly metadata
+- Unified (centralized) foundation for discovery and access across repositories
+ and archives: discovery projects can focus on user experience instead of
+ building their own catalog from scratch
+- Research corpus for meta-science, with an emphasis on availability and
+ reproducibility (metadata corpus itself is open access, and file-level hashes
+ control for content drift)
+- Foundational infrastructure for distributed digital preservation
+- On-ramp for non-traditional digital works ("grey literature") into the
+ scholarly web
+
+## Scope
+
+The goal is to capture the "scholarly web": the graph of written works that
+cite other works. Any work that is both cited more than once and cites more
+than one other work in the catalog is very likely to be in scope. "Leaf nodes"
+and small islands of intra-cited works may or may not be in scope.
+
+fatcat would not include any fulltext content itself, even for cleanly licensed
+(open access) works, but would have "strong" (verified) links to fulltext
+content, and would include file-level metadata (like hashes and fingerprints)
+to help discovery and identify content from any source. File-level URLs with
+context ("repository", "author-homepage", "web-archive") should make fatcat
+more useful for both humans and machines to quickly access fulltext content of
+a given mimetype than existing redirect or landing page systems. So another
+factor in deciding scope is whether a work has "digital fixity" and can be
+contained in a single immutable file.
+
+## References and Previous Work
+
+The closest overall analog of fatcat is [MusicBrainz][mb], a collaboratively
+edited music database. [Open Library][ol] is a very similar existing service,
+which exclusively contains book metadata.
+
+[Wikidata][wd] seems to be the most successful and actively edited/developed
+open bibliographic database at this time (early 2018), including the
+[wikicite][wikicite] conference and related Wikimedia/Wikipedia projects.
+Wikidata is a general purpose semantic database of entities, facts, and
+relationships; bibliographic metadata has become a large fraction of all
+content in recent years. The focus there seems to be linking knowledge
+(statements) to specific sources unambiguously. Potential advantages fatcat
+would have would be a focus on a specific scope (not a general-purpose database
+of entities) and a goal of completeness (capturing as many works and
+relationships as rapidly as possible). However, it might be better to just
+pitch in to the wikidata efforts.
+
+The technical design of fatcat is loosely inspired by the git
+branch/tag/commit/tree architecture, and specifically inspired by Oliver
+Charles' "New Edit System" [blog posts][nes-blog] from 2012.
+
+There are a whole bunch of proprietary, for-profit bibliographic databases,
+including Web of Science, Google Scholar, Microsoft Academic Graph, aminer,
+Scopus, and Dimensions. There are excellent field-limited databases like dblp,
+MEDLINE, and Semantic Scholar. There are some large general-purpose databases
+that are not directly user-editable, including the OpenCitation corpus, CORE,
+BASE, and CrossRef. I don't know of any large (more than 60 million works),
+open (bulk-downloadable with permissive or no license), field agnostic,
+user-editable corpus of scholarly publication bibliographic metadata.
+
+[nes-blog]: https://ocharles.org.uk/blog/posts/2012-07-10-nes-does-it-better-1.html
+[mb]: https://musicbrainz.org
+[ol]: https://openlibrary.org
+[wd]: https://wikidata.org
+[wikicite]: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikiCite_2017
+
+## Further Reading
+
+"From ISIS to CouchDB: Databases and Data Models for Bibliographic Records" by Luciano G. Ramalho. code4lib, 2013. <https://journal.code4lib.org/articles/4893>
+
+"Representing bibliographic data in JSON". github README file, 2017. <https://github.com/rdmpage/bibliographic-metadata-json>
+
+"Citation Style Language", <https://citationstyles.org/>
+
+"Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records", Wikipedia article, <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_Requirements_for_Bibliographic_Records>
+
+OpenCitations and I40C <http://opencitations.net/>, <https://i4oc.org/>
+
diff --git a/guide/src/rfc.md b/guide/src/rfc.md
deleted file mode 120000
index 25c420d2..00000000
--- a/guide/src/rfc.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-../../fatcat-rfc.md \ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/guide/src/roadmap.md b/guide/src/roadmap.md
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..b30a21ab
--- /dev/null
+++ b/guide/src/roadmap.md
@@ -0,0 +1,45 @@
+# Roadmap
+
+## Unresolved Questions
+
+How to handle translations of, eg, titles and author names? To be clear, not
+translations of works (which are just separate releases), these are more like
+aliases or "originally known as".
+
+Are bi-directional links a schema anti-pattern? Eg, should "work" point to a
+"primary release" (which itself points back to the work)?
+
+Should `identifier` and `citation` be their own entities, referencing other
+entities by UUID instead of by revision? Not sure if this would increase or
+decrease database resource utilization.
+
+Should contributor/author affiliation and contact information be retained? It
+could be very useful for disambiguation, but we don't want to build a huge
+database for spammers or "innovative" start-up marketing.
+
+Can general-purpose SQL databases like Postgres or MySQL scale well enough to
+hold several tables with billions of entity revisions? Right from the start
+there are hundreds of millions of works and releases, many of which having
+dozens of citations, many authors, and many identifiers, and then we'll have
+potentially dozens of edits for each of these, which multiply out to `1e8 * 2e1
+* 2e1 = 4e10`, or 40 billion rows in the citation table. If each row was 32
+bytes on average (uncompressed, not including index size), that would be 1.3
+TByte on its own, larger than common SSD disks. I do think a transactional SQL
+datastore is the right answer. In my experience locking and index rebuild times
+are usually the biggest scaling challenges; the largely-immutable architecture
+here should mitigate locking. Hopefully few indexes would be needed in the
+primary database, as user interfaces could rely on secondary read-only search
+engines for more complex queries and views.
+
+I see a tension between focus and scope creep. If a central database like
+fatcat doesn't support enough fields and metadata, then it will not be possible
+to completely import other corpuses, and this becomes "yet another" partial
+bibliographic database. On the other hand, accepting arbitrary data leads to
+other problems: sparseness increases (we have more "partial" data), potential
+for redundancy is high, humans will start editing content that might be
+bulk-replaced, etc.
+
+There might be a need to support "stub" references between entities. Eg, when
+adding citations from PDF extraction, the cited works are likely to be
+ambiguous. Could create "stub" works to be merged/resolved later, or could
+leave the citation hanging. Same with authors, containers (journals), etc.
diff --git a/guide/src/scope.md b/guide/src/scope.md
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..d5e74156
--- /dev/null
+++ b/guide/src/scope.md
@@ -0,0 +1,64 @@
+# Scope
+
+The goal is to capture the "scholarly web": the graph of written works that
+cite other works. Any work that is both cited more than once and cites more
+than one other work in the catalog is very likely to be in scope. "Leaf nodes"
+and small islands of intra-cited works may or may not be in scope.
+
+Overall focus is on written works, with some exceptions. The expected core
+focus (for which we would pursue "completeness") is:
+
+ journal articles
+ academic books
+ conference proceedings
+ technical memos
+ dissertations
+ monographs
+ well-researched blog posts
+ web pages (that have citations)
+ "white papers"
+
+Possibly in scope:
+
+ reports
+ magazine articles
+ essays
+ notable mailing list postings
+ government documents
+ presentations (slides, video)
+ datasets
+ well-researched wiki pages
+ patents
+
+Probably not:
+
+ court cases and legal documents
+ newspaper articles
+ social media
+ manuals
+ datasheets
+ courses
+ published poetry
+
+Definitely not:
+
+ audio recordings
+ tv show episodes
+ musical scores
+ advertisements
+
+Author, citation, and work disambiguation would be core tasks. Linking
+pre-prints to final publication is in scope.
+
+I'm much less interested in altmetrics, funding, and grant relationships than
+most existing databases in this space.
+
+fatcat would not include any fulltext content itself, even for cleanly licensed
+(open access) works, but would have "strong" (verified) links to fulltext
+content, and would include file-level metadata (like hashes and fingerprints)
+to help discovery and identify content from any source. File-level URLs with
+context ("repository", "author-homepage", "web-archive") should make fatcat
+more useful for both humans and machines to quickly access fulltext content of
+a given mimetype than existing redirect or landing page systems. So another
+factor in deciding scope is whether a work has "digital fixity" and can be
+contained in a single immutable file.
diff --git a/guide/src/workflow.md b/guide/src/workflow.md
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..13370a13
--- /dev/null
+++ b/guide/src/workflow.md
@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
+# Workflow
+
+## Basic Editing Workflow and Bots
+
+Both human editors and bots should have edits go through the same API, with
+humans using either the default web interface, integrations, or client
+software.
+
+The normal workflow is to create edits (or updates, merges, deletions) on
+individual entities. Individual changes are bundled into an "edit group" of
+related edits (eg, correcting authorship info for multiple works related to a
+single author). When ready, the editor would "submit" the edit group for
+review. During the review period, human editors vote and bots can perform
+automated checks. During this period the editor can make tweaks if necessary.
+After some fixed time period (72 hours?) with no changes and no blocking
+issues, the edit group would be auto-accepted if no merge conflicts have
+be created by other edits to the same entities. This process balances editing
+labor (reviews are easy, but optional) against quality (cool-down period makes
+it easier to detect and prevent spam or out-of-control bots). More
+sophisticated roles and permissions could allow some certain humans and bots to
+push through edits more rapidly (eg, importing new works from a publisher API).
+
+Bots need to be tuned to have appropriate edit group sizes (eg, daily batches,
+instead of millions of works in a single edit) to make human QA review and
+reverts managable.
+
+Data progeny and source references are captured in the edit metadata, instead
+of being encoded in the entity data model itself. In the case of importing
+external databases, the expectation is that special-purpose bot accounts
+are be used, and tag timestamps and external identifiers in the edit metadata.
+Human editors would leave edit messages to clarify their sources.
+
+A style guide (wiki) and discussion forum would be hosted as separate
+stand-alone services for editors to propose projects and debate process or
+scope changes. These services should have unified accounts and logins (oauth?)
+to have consistent account IDs across all mediums.