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Sinopia Linked Data Editor

Technical documentation specific to the Sinopia Linked Data Editor may also be found in the wiki. The Sinopia Editor homepage is available development.sinopia.io, stage.sinopia.io, and sinopia.io. The Sinopia Editor is a React application with all new user interfaces and functionality using React and the React ecosystem. Portions of the codebase originally extracted from the Library of Congress bfe project.

Installation

Prerequisites

  • node.js JavaScript runtime (See node version section below)
  • npm JavaScript package manager
  • Docker
  • A development cognito account: Go to https://development.sinopia.io/ and click "Request Account". This account can be used to authenticate when running locally as described below.

Node version

= 14 is recommended and <= 16.10 is required.

Newer versions cause Jest memory leaks. See:

You can use the "nvm" or "n" node package management to manage multiple version of node.

Installation instructions

  1. Run npm init, and follow the instructions that appear.
  2. Get latest npm: npm install -g npm@latest
  3. Run npm install. This installs everything needed for the build to run successfully.
  4. Run docker-compose pull to pull down all images.
  5. Add these to your local .env file:
  6. Run npm run build. This will copy some files to dist/ that are necessary to run locally.
COGNITO_TEST_USER_NAME='[email protected]' # a test user we have on dev and stage
COGNITO_TEST_USER_PASS='<get this from shared_configs or another developer>' # not committing the real value to a public repo
COGNITO_ADMIN_PASSWORD='<get this from shared_configs or another developer>'
DOCKER_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID='<get this from shared_configs or another developer>'
DOCKER_AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY='<get this from shared_configs or another developer>'

Running the application

To start all of the supporting services (ElasticSearch, API, etc.): docker-compose up -d

Note that this will bring up the sinopia-editor app on port 8000, but it will NOT be in a mode where you can make code changes and see them live. To do this, start the Express web server (via npm start) and run the application at http://localhost:8888:

npm run dev-start

This will run the app in development mode and code changes will immediately be loaded without having to restart the server. Note that sinopia editor being run by docker on port 8000 will still be viewable but will not reflect any code changes you make immediately, so be careful which port you are accessing the app at to avoid confusion.

Specify the environment variable USE_FIXTURES=true as shown below if you would like to use fixture resources and resource templates. The fixtures are listed in __tests__/testUtilities/fixtureLoaderHelper.js. Fixture resource templates will be listed on the templates list page and fixture resources can be searched on by entering the resource's URI in the Sinopia search box.

USE_FIXTURES=true npm run dev-start

Developers

Linters for JavaScript

There are two linters/formatters used in this project: eslint and prettier. They can be run together or individually.

To run both: npm run lint

To auto-fix errors in both (where possible): npm run fix

To run just eslint: npm run eslint

To automatically fix just eslint problems (where possible): npm run eslint-fix

To run just prettier: npm run pretty

To automatically fix just prettier problems (where possible): npm run pretty-fix

Unit, feature, and integration tests

Tests are written with jest and react-testing-library.

To run all of the tests: npm test

To run a single test file (and see console messages): npx jest __tests__/actionCreators/resources.test.js

To run a single test (and see console messages): npx jest __tests__/actionCreators/resources.test.js -t "newResourceFromN3 loading a resource dispatches actions"

Or temporarily change the test description from it("does something") to it.only("does something") and run the single test file with npx.

Adding new test fixtures

If you have the docker environment running (and USE_FIXTURES env variable is false) you can use the Load RDF tab, paste in the JSON-LD, set the base URI, and submitting will save the RT into your environment.

Otherwise, to use the static fixtures (USE_FIXTURES=true) add the fixture to the __tests__/__template_fixtures__ directory and update the templateFilenames constant in the _tests_/testUtilities/fixtureLoaderHelper.js with the filename of the new test fixture.

If there is a resource template you would like to copy, you can go to the direct URI in the sinopia api (e.g. https://api.development.sinopia.io/resource/ld4p:RT:bf2:Monograph:Work:Un-nested) and copy everything returned for the data list. Make sure you change (e.g.) "@id": "https://api.development.sinopia.io/resource/ld4p:RT:bf2:Monograph:Work:Un-nested" to "@id": "http://localhost:3000/resource/ld4p:RT:bf2:Monograph:Work:Un-nested"

Troubleshooting TypeError: Cannot read properties of null (reading 'createEvent')

When this error occurs, there is no indication as to which test is failing. To determine which test is failing, remove the "reporters" section from package.json.

While there are a large number of possible causes for this error (see Google), it is most likely a timeout that needs to be increased.

End-to-end tests

End-to-end tests are written with Cypress.

Add these to your local cypress.env.json file:

{
  "COGNITO_TEST_USER_NAME": "sinopia-devs_client-tester",
  "COGNITO_TEST_USER_PASS": "<get this from shared_configs or another developer>"
}

The end-to-end tests run against a complete environment running in docker, so it must be running as described above.

To open Cypress interactively (for test development), execute npm run cypress-open and click on the test to run.

To run test non-interactively, execute npm run cypress-run.

Cross Platform Testing

We use open source Browserstack accounts for cross-platform/browser testing. See the Sinopia Editor wiki for more details about how to get an account.

Testing Honeybadger

To trigger a test exception, doubleclick "The underdrawing for the new world of linked data in libraries" on the home page.

Monitoring ElasticSearch

DejaVu is available for monitoring local ElasticSearch.

To use DejaVu:

  1. Uncomment the appropriate section in docker-compose.yml. (Do not commit this change.)
  2. docker-compose up -d
  3. Browse to http://localhost:1358.
  4. When prompted, enter http://localhost:9200 as the ElasticSearch URL and * as the index name.

Monitoring Mongo

Mongo-Express is available for monitoring local Mongo.

To use Mongo-Express:

  1. Uncomment the appropriate section in docker-compose.yml. (Do not commit this change.)
  2. docker-compose up -d
  3. Browse to http://localhost:8082.

Release management (including weekly dependency update) instructions

See the release process checklist.

Changes to environment variables

If you add environment variables to which the Editor needs to pay attention (e.g. for configuring connections to Cognito or other external services on a per-instance basis), you'll need to make sure they're added to lists in three places besides e.g. the Config.js function that uses the environment variable.

Proxying to a different environment

Proxying allows using the Sinopia API and search from a different environment, rather than local instances.

To proxy to development:

  1. Build the proxy image: docker build -t proxy-apache2:latest -f Dockerfile.proxy .
  2. Start the proxy: docker run --rm --name proxy-apache2 -p 8080:8080 -e ENV_HOSTNAME=development.sinopia.io proxy-apache2:latest
  3. Start the Sinopia Editor: SINOPIA_API_BASE_URL=http://localhost:8080 SEARCH_HOST=http://localhost:8080 npm run dev-start

Note that proxying to other environments may require additional Cognito configuration.

Base Templates

Conceptually, the Sinopia Editor uses JSON "resource templates" to inform the editor code which widgets (React "components") need to be displayed in order to create resource RDF according to said "resource template."

A "resource template" is comprised of one or more "property templates." But the Sinopia Editor is also used to create those JSON "property templates." Thus, there must be some initial JSON base templates to inform the editor code which widgets (React "components") need to be displayed in order to create the JSON corresponding to a valid property template. A set of "start the world," "bootup templates", if you will.

Where do Base Template JSON Files Live?

base templates are in the static/templates/ folder, and may themselves refer to files up a level in the static/ folder. The loading of the base templates is baked into the sinopia_editor code.

Reiterating: the UI widgets displayed for creating/editing a property template are driven by what is in the static/ folder and its subfolders. There is no additional deployment necessary.

The sinopia_editor code displays the properties and classes prefixed "http://sinopia.io/vocabulary/" from a javascript object in src/components/vocabulary/Vocab.js. If a new property is added to the Sinopia specific vocabulary (e.g. by adding to a base template), then that property should also be added to src/components/vocabulary/Vocab.js. Changes to the documentation for these properties can be done as a pull request.

State model

Redux State ER Diagram

{
  subjects: {
    <subject key [nanoid]>: {<subject>},
    ...
  }
  properties: {
    <property key [nanoid]>: {<property>}
    ...
  }
  values: {
    <value key, [nanoid]>: {<values>}
    ...
  },
  subjectTemplates: {
    <subject template key [resource template id]>: {<subject template>}
    ...
  },
  propertyTemplates: {
    <property template key [resource template id > property uri]>: {<[property template]>}
    ...
  }
}

Subject model

{
  key: <nanoid>
  uri: <uri|null>
  subjectTemplateKey: <key of subject template>,
  -> subjectTemplate: {subjectTemplate}
  propertyKeys: [key of property, ...]
  rootResourceKey: <key of root resource that this subject is descendant of; for root resource is own key>
  rootPropertyKey: <key of root property that this subject is part of; for root resource is null>
  descUriOrLiteralValueKeys = [key of descendant uri or literal Value, ...]
  descWithErrorPropertyKeys = [key of descendant property with an error, ...]
  valueSubjectOfKey: <if a nested subject, key of the value | null>
  -> properties: [{property}, ...]
  labels = [labels of property/resource templates of self and ancestors, ...]
  showNav: <true | false>
  classes: [resource type URI, e.g., http://id.loc.gov/ontologies/bibframe/Instance, ...]
}

-> Added by selector, not stored in state.

The following are only in the resource subject (that is, the base subject).

{
  group: <group that that resource belongs to>,
  editGroups: [groups that can edit the resource],
  bfAdminMetadataRefs: [uri of referenced admin metadata resource, ...],
  bfWorkRefs: [uri of referenced Bibframe Work resource, ...],
  bfInstanceRefs: [uri of referenced Bibframe Instance resource, ...],
  bfItemRefs: [uri of referenced Bibframe Item resources, ...],
  sinopiaLocalAdminMetadataForRefs: [uri of referenced resources, ...]
  defaultLang: <default language tag>
}

Subject template model

{
  key: <resource template id, e.g., resourceTemplate:bf2:Monograph:Instance>,
  id: <resource template id, e.g., resourceTemplate:bf2:Monograph:Instance>,
  uri: <resource template uri, e.g. http://datastore/resource/resourceTemplate:bf2:Monograph:Instance>,
  class: <required resource type URI, e.g., http://id.loc.gov/ontologies/bibframe/Instance>,
  classes: {resource type URI: resource URI label, ... This includes required resource and optional URIs}
  label: <resource label, e.g., "BIBFRAME Instance">,
  author: <author>,
  remark: <remark>,
  date: <date>,
  suppressible: <true | false>,
  propertyKeys: [key of property templates, ...],
  group: <group that that template belongs to>,
  editGroups: [groups that can edit the template],

}

Property model

{
  key: <nanoid>,
  subjectKey: <key of subject>,
  -> subject: {<subject>}
  propertyTemplateKey: <key of property template>,
  -> propertyTemplate: {<propertyTemplate>},
  valueKeys: [key of value, ...] | null (if not expanded)
  -> values: [{value},...]
  show: <true | false>
  showNav: <true | false>
  rootSubjectKey: <key of root resource that this property is descendant of>
  rootPropertyKey: <key of root property that this subject is part of; for root property is own key>
  descUriOrLiteralValueKeys = [key of descendant uri or literal Value, ...]
  descWithErrorPropertyKeys = [key of descendant or self Property with an error, ...]
  labels = [labels of property/resource templates of self and ancestors, ...]
  propertyUri: <property uri, e.g., "http://id.loc.gov/ontologies/bibframe/title - only when property is ordered">
}

-> Added by selector, not stored in state.

Property template model

{
  key: <resource template id > property uris>,
  subjectTemplateKey: <key of subject template>,
  label: <label, e.g., "Title Information">,
  uris: {<property uri, e.g., "http://id.loc.gov/ontologies/bibframe/title">: <property uri label>}
  defaultUri: <a property uri used as default when creating a value>
  required: <true | false>
  repeatable: <true | false>
  ordered: <true | false>
  languageSuppressed: <true | false>
  labelSuppressed: <true | false>
  immutable: <true | false> (property cannot be changed after resource has been saved)
  defaults: [{literal: <literal>, lang: <lang>}, {uri: <uri>, label: <label>},...]
  remark: <remark>,
  remarkUrl: <remark url, e.g., "http://access.rdatoolkit.org/2.13.html">
  remarkUrlLabel: <a descriptive label about the remark url, e.g., "Title Proper">
  type: <resource | uri | literal>,
  component: <InputLookup | InputLookupQA | InputList | InputLiteral | InputURI>,
  valueSubjectTemplateKeys: [<subject template keys>],
  authorities: [{authority}, ...],
  validationRegex: <regex for literal validation, as a string with backslashes double-escaped (e.g. "^\\d+$" becomes /^\d+$/)>,
  validationDataType: <uri for integer, dateTime, etc. for literal validation>
}

Authority model

{
  uri: <authority uri>
  label: <label>
  authority: <authority, e.g., "geonames_ld4l_cache">
  subauthority: <subauthority, e.g., "area">
  nonldLookup: <true | false>
}

Value model

{
  key: <nanoid>,
  propertyKey: <key of property>,
  -> property: {<property>},
  literal: <literal>,
  lang: <language for literal or URI label>,
  uri: <uri>,
  label: <label for uri>,
  valueSubjectKey: <key for subject for a nested resource>,
  -> valueSubject: {<subject>}
  -> index: <1 based index of the value (relative to siblings)>
  rootResourceKey: <key of root resource that this property is descendant of>
  rootPropertyKey: <key of root property that this subject is part of>
  component: <InputLiteralValue | InputURIValue | InputLookupValue | InputListValue>,
  errors: [validation errors, ...]
  propertyUri: <property uri, e.g., "http://id.loc.gov/ontologies/bibframe/title - only when property is unordered">
}

-> Added by selector, not stored in state.

Note: A value will have literal / lang or uri / label or valueSubjectKey.

Contributors

Index Data:

Maintainer

  • LD4P2 Sinopia Project Team

License

Unless otherwise noted, code that is originally developed by Stanford University in the Sinopia Editor is licensed under the Apache 2.

Original bfe code is in the Public Domain.

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