Difference between revisions of "METS"
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Revision as of 17:24, 11 October 2011
Main Page > Development > Development documentation > Metadata elements > METS
Requirements
- The METS file will have a basic generic structure which will be present for all AIPs derived from different kinds of transfers. Certain types of transfers, such as those from DSpace, will have additional requirements but will have the same basic structure.
Generic transfer
This section shows a sample METS structure for an ingested SIP containing the following:
- /objects
- LAND2.BMP
- lion.svg
- /More images
- MARBLES.TGA
<dmdSec>
The dmdSec for a generic transfer is simple Dublin Core, except for <isPartOf>, which is a qualification of <Relation>. Note that ID for this dmdSec is 01. Any successive dmdSecs (eg for file-level descriptions) are numbered consecutively; the descriptions are linked to their relevant files and directories in the structMap.
<fileSec>
The fileSec is broken into two fileGrps, one for original files and one for preservation copies:
- <fileGrp USE="original">
- <fileGrp USE="preservation">
Example:
- <fileGrp USE="original">
- <file ID="LAND2.BMP-[UUID]" GROUPID="G1" ADMID="digiprov-LAND2.BMP-[UUID]"><Flocat xlink:href="objects/LAND2.BMP" locType="other" otherLocType="system"/>
- <fileGrp USE="preservation">
- <file ID="LAND2-[UUID].tif-[UUID]" GROUPID="G1" ADMID="LAND2-[UUID].tif-[UUID]"><Flocat xlink:href="objects/LAND2-[UUID].tif" locType="other" otherLocType="system"/>
Note the GROUPID="G1"; this links the original file to its normalized version. Also note that the objects in the submissionDocumentation folder are treated in the same way as ingested objects.
<structMap>
The structMap section of the Archivematica METS file is designed to capture the directory structure of the AIP. Its TYPE is therefore physical (rather than logical) and it is grouped into divisions by directory, as follows:
- AIP
- /objects
- /directory1
- /directory2 etc.
- /submissionDocumentation
- /objects
Note the DMID="01" in the objects directory div. This links the Dublin Core metadata to the contents of the objects directory.
DSpace transfer
A typical DSpace transfer will contain objects, licenses, METS files, and ocr text files if the objects are scanned pdf files. In this example, the pdf files are scanned articles, the files without extensions are licenses and the txt files are ocr text for the articles. Note that there is a collection-level METS file in the objects directory. On ingest, all the METS files are assigned UUIDs and moved to the metadata directory of the SIP.
- /objects
- /Item@249-2700
- mets.xml
- bitstream_8266.pdf
- bitstream_8267
- bitstream_40314.txt
- mets.xml
- /Item@249-2701
- bitstream_8268.pdf
- bitstream_8269
- bitstream_39530.txt
- mets.xml
dmdSec
The descriptive metadata for DSpace collections are contained in the METS files that come with the DSpace export, so the Archivematica METS file will point to them using mdRef. In this example, dmdSec_01 points to the collection-level mets file; dmdSec_02 and dmdSec_03 point to the mets files for the objects:
<fileSec>
The fileSec is broken into four fileGrps as follows:
- <fileGrp USE="original">
- <fileGrp USE="preservation">
- <fileGrp USE="text/ocr">
- <fileGrp USE="license">
<structMap>
Digitization output
A SIP containing the output of a digitization project may contain service and access copies of objects in additional to master copies. Normalization will not typically be required on any of the objects. An example of this kind of output would be unedited tiff files with colour targets (master), edited tiff files with colour targets removed (service) and high-resolution jpegs (access copies). In some cases, the access copies will be removed to the DIP, but in others they will be copied to the DIP but copies will also be retained in the objects directory.
The SIP should be structured so that the objects are clearly identified as master, service or access copies, i.e. through the directory structure:
- /objects
- file1.tif
- file2.tif
- /service
- file1.tif
- file2.tif
- /access
- file1.jpg
- file2.jpg
<fileSec>
We will keep <fileGrp USE="original"> for master copies to stay consistent with the generic METS file structure. So a typical fileSec for an AIP containing digitization output would consist of the following:
- <fileGrp USE="original">
- <fileGrp USE="service">
- <fileGrp USE="access">
There also be <fileGrp USE="preservation"> for normalized copies of the submission documentation or if any of the ingested objects are normalized.