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- <title>XML resources publication guidelines</title>
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- <body bgcolor="#fffacd" text="#000000">
- <h1 align="center">XML resources publication guidelines</h1>
- <p></p>
- <p>The goal of this document is to provide a set of guidelines and tips
- helping the publication and deployment of <a
- href="http://www.w3.org/XML/">XML</a> resources for the <a
- href="http://www.gnome.org/">GNOME project</a>. However it is not tied to
- GNOME and might be helpful more generally. I welcome <a
- href="mailto:veillard@redhat.com">feedback</a> on this document.</p>
- <p>The intended audience is the software developers who started using XML
- for some of the resources of their project, as a storage format, for data
- exchange, checking or transformations. There have been an increasing number
- of new XML formats defined, but not all steps have been taken, possibly because of
- lack of documentation, to truly gain all the benefits of the use of XML.
- These guidelines hope to improve the matter and provide a better overview of
- the overall XML processing and associated steps needed to deploy it
- successfully:</p>
- <p>Table of contents:</p>
- <ol>
- <li><a href="#Design">Design guidelines</a></li>
- <li><a href="#Canonical">Canonical URL</a></li>
- <li><a href="#Catalog">Catalog setup</a></li>
- <li><a href="#Package">Package integration</a></li>
- </ol>
- <h2><a name="Design">Design guidelines</a></h2>
- <p>This part intends to focus on the format itself of XML. It may arrive
- a bit too late since the structure of the document may already be cast in
- existing and deployed code. Still, here are a few rules which might be helpful
- when designing a new XML vocabulary or making the revision of an existing
- format:</p>
- <h3>Reuse existing formats:</h3>
- <p>This may sounds a bit simplistic, but before designing your own format,
- try to lookup existing XML vocabularies on similar data. Ideally this allows
- you to reuse them, in which case a lot of the existing tools like DTD, schemas
- and stylesheets may already be available. If you are looking at a
- documentation format, <a href="http://www.docbook.org/">DocBook</a> should
- handle your needs. If reuse is not possible because some semantic or use case
- aspects are too different this will be helpful avoiding design errors like
- targeting the vocabulary to the wrong abstraction level. In this format
- design phase try to be synthetic and be sure to express the real content of
- your data and use the XML structure to express the semantic and context of
- those data.</p>
- <h3>DTD rules:</h3>
- <p>Building a DTD (Document Type Definition) or a Schema describing the
- structure allowed by instances is the core of the design process of the
- vocabulary. Here are a few tips:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>use significant words for the element and attributes names.</li>
- <li>do not use attributes for general textual content, attributes
- will be modified by the parser before reaching the application,
- spaces and line informations will be modified.</li>
- <li>use single elements for every string that might be subject to
- localization. The canonical way to localize XML content is to use
- siblings element carrying different xml:lang attributes like in the
- following:
- <pre><welcome>
- <msg xml:lang="en">hello</msg>
- <msg xml:lang="fr">bonjour</msg>
- </welcome></pre>
- </li>
- <li>use attributes to refine the content of an element but avoid them for
- more complex tasks, attribute parsing is not cheaper than an element and
- it is far easier to make an element content more complex while attribute
- will have to remain very simple.</li>
- </ul>
- <h3>Versioning:</h3>
- <p>As part of the design, make sure the structure you define will be usable
- for future extension that you may not consider for the current version. There
- are two parts to this:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>Make sure the instance contains a version number which will allow to
- make backward compatibility easy. Something as simple as having a
- <code>version="1.0"</code> on the root document of the instance is
- sufficient.</li>
- <li>While designing the code doing the analysis of the data provided by the
- XML parser, make sure you can work with unknown versions, generate a UI
- warning and process only the tags recognized by your version but keep in
- mind that you should not break on unknown elements if the version
- attribute was not in the recognized set.</li>
- </ul>
- <h3>Other design parts:</h3>
- <p>While defining you vocabulary, try to think in term of other usage of your
- data, for example how using XSLT stylesheets could be used to make an HTML
- view of your data, or to convert it into a different format. Checking XML
- Schemas and looking at defining an XML Schema with a more complete
- validation and datatyping of your data structures is important, this helps
- avoiding some mistakes in the design phase.</p>
- <h3>Namespace:</h3>
- <p>If you expect your XML vocabulary to be used or recognized outside of your
- application (for example binding a specific processing from a graphic shell
- like Nautilus to an instance of your data) then you should really define an <a
- href="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/">XML namespace</a> for your
- vocabulary. A namespace name is an URL (absolute URI more precisely). It is
- generally recommended to anchor it as an HTTP resource to a server associated
- with the software project. See the next section about this. In practice this
- will mean that XML parsers will not handle your element names as-is but as a
- couple based on the namespace name and the element name. This allows it to
- recognize and disambiguate processing. Unicity of the namespace name can be
- for the most part guaranteed by the use of the DNS registry. Namespace can
- also be used to carry versioning information like:</p>
- <p><code>"http://www.gnome.org/project/projectname/1.0/"</code></p>
- <p>An easy way to use them is to make them the default namespace on the
- root element of the XML instance like:</p>
- <pre><structure xmlns="http://www.gnome.org/project/projectname/1.0/">
- <data>
- ...
- </data>
- </structure></pre>
- <p>In that document, structure and all descendant elements like data are in
- the given namespace.</p>
- <h2><a name="Canonical">Canonical URL</a></h2>
- <p>As seen in the previous namespace section, while XML processing is not
- tied to the Web there is a natural synergy between both. XML was designed to
- be available on the Web, and keeping the infrastructure that way helps
- deploying the XML resources. The core of this issue is the notion of
- "Canonical URL" of an XML resource. The resource can be an XML document, a
- DTD, a stylesheet, a schema, or even non-XML data associated with an XML
- resource, the canonical URL is the URL where the "master" copy of that
- resource is expected to be present on the Web. Usually when processing XML a
- copy of the resource will be present on the local disk, maybe in
- /usr/share/xml or /usr/share/sgml maybe in /opt or even on C:\projectname\
- (horror !). The key point is that the way to name that resource should be
- independent of the actual place where it resides on disk if it is available,
- and the fact that the processing will still work if there is no local copy
- (and that the machine where the processing is connected to the Internet).</p>
- <p>What this really means is that one should never use the local name of a
- resource to reference it but always use the canonical URL. For example in a
- DocBook instance the following should not be used:</p>
- <pre><!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"<br>
- "/usr/share/xml/docbook/4.2/docbookx.dtd"></pre>
- <p>But always reference the canonical URL for the DTD:</p>
- <pre><!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"<br>
- "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> </pre>
- <p>Similarly, the document instance may reference the <a
- href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt">XSLT</a> stylesheets needed to process it to
- generate HTML, and the canonical URL should be used:</p>
- <pre><?xml-stylesheet
- href="http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current/html/docbook.xsl"
- type="text/xsl"?></pre>
- <p>Defining the canonical URL for the resources needed should obey a few
- simple rules similar to those used to design namespace names:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>use a DNS name you know is associated to the project and will be
- available on the long term</li>
- <li>within that server space, reserve the right to the subtree where you
- intend to keep those data</li>
- <li>version the URL so that multiple concurrent versions of the resources
- can be hosted simultaneously</li>
- </ul>
- <h2><a name="Catalog">Catalog setup</a></h2>
- <h3>How catalogs work:</h3>
- <p>The catalogs are the technical mechanism which allow the XML processing
- tools to use a local copy of the resources if it is available even if the
- instance document references the canonical URL. <a
- href="http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/">XML Catalogs</a> are
- anchored in the root catalog (usually <code>/etc/xml/catalog</code> or
- defined by the user). They are a tree of XML documents defining the mappings
- between the canonical naming space and the local installed ones, this can be
- seen as a static cache structure.</p>
- <p>When the XML processor is asked to process a resource it will
- automatically test for a locally available version in the catalog, starting
- from the root catalog, and possibly fetching sub-catalog resources until it
- finds that the catalog has that resource or not. If not the default
- processing of fetching the resource from the Web is done, allowing in most
- case to recover from a catalog miss. The key point is that the document
- instances are totally independent of the availability of a catalog or from
- the actual place where the local resource they reference may be installed.
- This greatly improves the management of the documents in the long run, making
- them independent of the platform or toolchain used to process them. The
- figure below tries to express that mechanism:<img src="catalog.gif"
- alt="Picture describing the catalog "></p>
- <h3>Usual catalog setup:</h3>
- <p>Usually catalogs for a project are setup as a 2 level hierarchical cache,
- the root catalog containing only "delegates" indicating a separate subcatalog
- dedicated to the project. The goal is to keep the root catalog clean and
- simplify the maintenance of the catalog by using separate catalogs per
- project. For example when creating a catalog for the <a
- href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1">XHTML1</a> DTDs, only 3 items are added to
- the root catalog:</p>
- <pre> <delegatePublic publicIdStartString="-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0"
- catalog="file:///usr/share/sgml/xhtml1/xmlcatalog"/>
- <delegateSystem systemIdStartString="http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD"
- catalog="file:///usr/share/sgml/xhtml1/xmlcatalog"/>
- <delegateURI uriStartString="http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD"
- catalog="file:///usr/share/sgml/xhtml1/xmlcatalog"/></pre>
- <p>They are all "delegates" meaning that if the catalog system is asked to
- resolve a reference corresponding to them, it has to lookup a sub catalog.
- Here the subcatalog was installed as
- <code>/usr/share/sgml/xhtml1/xmlcatalog</code> in the local tree. That
- decision is left to the sysadmin or the packager for that system and may
- obey different rules, but the actual place on the filesystem (or on a
- resource cache on the local network) will not influence the processing as
- long as it is available. The first rule indicate that if the reference uses a
- PUBLIC identifier beginning with the</p>
- <p><code>"-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0"</code></p>
- <p>substring, then the catalog lookup should be limited to the specific given
- lookup catalog. Similarly the second and third entries indicate those
- delegation rules for SYSTEM, DOCTYPE or normal URI references when the URL
- starts with the <code>"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD"</code> substring
- which indicates the location on the W3C server where the XHTML1 resources are
- stored. Those are the beginning of all Canonical URLs for XHTML1 resources.
- Those three rules are sufficient in practice to capture all references to XHTML1
- resources and direct the processing tools to the right subcatalog.</p>
- <h3>A subcatalog example:</h3>
- <p>Here is the complete subcatalog used for XHTML1:</p>
- <pre><?xml version="1.0"?>
- <!DOCTYPE catalog PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD Entity Resolution XML Catalog V1.0//EN"
- "http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/release/1.0/catalog.dtd">
- <catalog xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog">
- <public publicId="-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- uri="xhtml1-20020801/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"/>
- <public publicId="-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
- uri="xhtml1-20020801/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"/>
- <public publicId="-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Frameset//EN"
- uri="xhtml1-20020801/DTD/xhtml1-frameset.dtd"/>
- <rewriteSystem systemIdStartString="http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD"
- rewritePrefix="xhtml1-20020801/DTD"/>
- <rewriteURI uriStartString="http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD"
- rewritePrefix="xhtml1-20020801/DTD"/>
- </catalog></pre>
- <p>There are a few things to notice:</p>
- <ul>
- <li>this is an XML resource, it points to the DTD using Canonical URLs, the
- root element defines a namespace (but based on an URN not an HTTP
- URL).</li>
- <li>it contains 5 rules, the 3 first ones are direct mapping for the 3
- PUBLIC identifiers defined by the XHTML1 specification and associating
- them with the local resource containing the DTD, the 2 last ones are
- rewrite rules allowing to build the local filename for any URL based on
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD", the local cache simplifies the rules by
- keeping the same structure as the on-line server at the Canonical URL</li>
- <li>the local resources are designated using URI references (the uri or
- rewritePrefix attributes), the base being the containing sub-catalog URL,
- which means that in practice the copy of the XHTML1 strict DTD is stored
- locally in
- <code>/usr/share/sgml/xhtml1/xmlcatalog/xhtml1-20020801/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd</code></li>
- </ul>
- <p>Those 5 rules are sufficient to cover all references to the resources held
- at the Canonical URL for the XHTML1 DTDs.</p>
- <h2><a name="Package">Package integration</a></h2>
- <p>Creating and removing catalogs should be handled as part of the process of
- (un)installing the local copy of the resources. The catalog files being XML
- resources should be processed with XML based tools to avoid problems with the
- generated files, the xmlcatalog command coming with libxml2 allows you to create
- catalogs, and add or remove rules at that time. Here is a complete example
- coming from the RPM for the XHTML1 DTDs post install script. While this example
- is platform and packaging specific, this can be useful as a an example in
- other contexts:</p>
- <pre>%post
- CATALOG=/usr/share/sgml/xhtml1/xmlcatalog
- #
- # Register it in the super catalog with the appropriate delegates
- #
- ROOTCATALOG=/etc/xml/catalog
- if [ ! -r $ROOTCATALOG ]
- then
- /usr/bin/xmlcatalog --noout --create $ROOTCATALOG
- fi
- if [ -w $ROOTCATALOG ]
- then
- /usr/bin/xmlcatalog --noout --add "delegatePublic" \
- "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0" \
- "file://$CATALOG" $ROOTCATALOG
- /usr/bin/xmlcatalog --noout --add "delegateSystem" \
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD" \
- "file://$CATALOG" $ROOTCATALOG
- /usr/bin/xmlcatalog --noout --add "delegateURI" \
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD" \
- "file://$CATALOG" $ROOTCATALOG
- fi</pre>
- <p>The XHTML1 subcatalog is not created on-the-fly in that case, it is
- installed as part of the files of the packages. So the only work needed is to
- make sure the root catalog exists and register the delegate rules.</p>
- <p>Similarly, the script for the post-uninstall just remove the rules from the
- catalog:</p>
- <pre>%postun
- #
- # On removal, unregister the xmlcatalog from the supercatalog
- #
- if [ "$1" = 0 ]; then
- CATALOG=/usr/share/sgml/xhtml1/xmlcatalog
- ROOTCATALOG=/etc/xml/catalog
- if [ -w $ROOTCATALOG ]
- then
- /usr/bin/xmlcatalog --noout --del \
- "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0" $ROOTCATALOG
- /usr/bin/xmlcatalog --noout --del \
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD" $ROOTCATALOG
- /usr/bin/xmlcatalog --noout --del \
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD" $ROOTCATALOG
- fi
- fi</pre>
- <p>Note the test against $1, this is needed to not remove the delegate rules
- in case of upgrade of the package.</p>
- <p>Following the set of guidelines and tips provided in this document should
- help deploy the XML resources in the GNOME framework without much pain and
- ensure a smooth evolution of the resource and instances.</p>
- <p><a href="mailto:veillard@redhat.com">Daniel Veillard</a></p>
- <p>$Id$</p>
- <p></p>
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