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- Description:
A lightning talk (seven minute) presentation given at Samvera Connect 2020 On-line described thus and The Fedora community has been making steady progress on Fedora 6.0, with a beta release anticipated in 2020 and a full release in early 2021. This new version of Fedora introduces a number of benefits and improvements that will be of interest to the Samvera community, including enhanced digital preservation capabilities via the Oxford Common File Layout and performance improvements that address specific issues identified by community members. This lightning talk will provide a brief overview of the Fedora 6.0 features and improvements that will be of most interest to the Samvera community, along with an update on development progress to date. The 'Related URL' below links to beginning of this presentation in the day's YouTube recording.
- Keyword:
Fedora, Oxford Common File Layout (OCFL), Samvera, Migration, API, Connect 2020, and Lightning talk
- Subject:
Samvera Community
- Creator:
Wilcox, David
- Contributor:
LYRASIS
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
10/27/2020
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Presentation
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- Description:
Fedora 6, the next major version of Fedora, will focus on digital preservation by aligning with the Oxford Common File Layout (OCFL). The OFCL is an application-independent approach to the storage of digital objects in a structured, transparent, and predictable manner. This provides many benefits, including, storage diversity, to ensure content can be stored on diverse storage infrastructures including cloud object stores, parsability, both by humans and machines, to ensure content can be understood in the absence of original software, robustness against errors, corruption, and migration between storage technologies, versioning, so repositories can make changes to objects allowing its history to persist, and and completeness, so that a repository can be rebuilt from the files it stores. This presentation will provide an overview of the Fedora 6 design, including a brief introduction to the OCFL and how it is being implemented, along with a summary of development progress to date and the anticipated timeline for the 6.0 release. The video recording of this segment is available at the 'Related URL' below.
- Keyword:
Screencast, Virtual Connect 2020, Migration, Preservation, Fedora, Samvera, and Oxford Common File Layout (OCFL)
- Subject:
Samvera Community and Fedora
- Creator:
Wilcox, David
- Contributor:
Lyrasis and DuraSpace
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
05/15/2020
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Presentation
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- Description:
Open source software isn’t really free. This might seem obvious to some, but there are many members of open source communities that consume rather than contribute, Slides from a panel session given at the Open Repositories conference in 2015 held in Indianapolis described thus, and they use the software but are either unwilling or unable to engage with the community to write code, submit use cases, create documentation, or do any of the other things that make an open source project a success. Fortunately, things don't have to be this way. Over the past two years, the Fedora project has undertaken a great effort to revitalize not only the software but the community itself. By maintaining open, transparent communication, soliciting use cases, development, and testing from community members, and establishing a clear project governance structure, we have laid the groundwork for a successful community source project. At the same time, the Islandora and Hydra communities have pursued similar strategies to build and sustain their own communities and the broader Fedora community. This panel will feature a discussion on the recent successes of the Fedora community and future plans to continue raising the level of community engagement and project ownership.
- Keyword:
Community, Collaboration, Islandora, Hydra, Open Repositories 2015, and Fedora
- Subject:
Hydra Project
- Creator:
Ruest, Nick, Wilcox, David, and Cramer, Tom
- Contributor:
York University, DuraSpace, and Stanford University
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
06/09/2015
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Presentation
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- Description:
A lightning talk at Samvera Virtual Connect 2019 described thus and For the past several years the Fedora community has prioritized alignment with linked data best practices and modern web standards. We are now shifting our attention back to Fedora's digital preservation roots with a focus on the Oxford Common File Layout (OCFL). The OFCL is an application-independent approach to the storage of digital objects in a structured, transparent, and predictable manner. Fedora 6.0, the next major release, will replace the current ModeShape backend with a more scalable and performant implementation that persists data in accordance with the OCFL specification. This presentation will provide an overview of the Fedora 6.0 design, including an introduction to the OCFL and how it will be implemented. It will be of interest to Samvera community members who want to track Fedora developments and understand their impact on Samvera applications.
- Keyword:
Fedora, Oxford Common File Layout (OCFL), Samvera, Virtual Connect 2019, Lightning talk, and Preservation
- Subject:
Samvera Community
- Creator:
Wilcox, David
- Contributor:
DuraSpace
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
04/23-24/2019
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Presentation
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- Description:
Fedora, the flexible, extensible, open source repository platform for managing, preserving, and providing access to digital content, is a key component of most Samvera implementations. Fedora 4.x, the latest version of Fedora, has been in production since 2015, and since then the real-world experience of the community’s use cases has clarified Fedora’s role in supporting preservation and access in the context of large collections and performance at scale. This understanding led to an effort to formally specify the Fedora application programming interface (API) that provides a stable layer of abstraction between clients and repository instances. In this way, alternate back-end implementations suited for specific user cases can all expose the same core services to repository clients. This initiative will allow the Fedora project to adapt to technological change more easily over time while insulating clients from changes in the underlying implementation. This presentation will provide an overview of the the API specification effort, including current status, motivations, and benefits, with a particular focus on the relevance to Samvera. A brief survey of alternate implementations will provide context for the different use cases that will be enabled by the specification. This will be of interest to current and future Fedora implementers looking for an update on the current status and technical roadmap of the project. A video recording of this session is available at the 'Related URL' below. and A presentation given at Samvera Connect 2018 described thus
- Keyword:
Fedora, Connect 2018, and API
- Subject:
Samvera Community
- Creator:
Wilcox, David
- Contributor:
University of Utah and DuraSpace
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
10/11/2018
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Presentation