searchRetrieve: Part 1. Abstract Protocol Definition Version 1.0
OASIS Standard
30 January 2013
Specification URIs
This version:
http://docs.oasis-open.org/search-ws/searchRetrieve/v1.0/os/part1-apd/searchRetrieve-v1.0-os-part1-apd.doc (Authoritative)
Previous version:
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http://docs.oasis-open.org/search-ws/searchRetrieve/v1.0/searchRetrieve-v1.0-part1-apd.doc (Authoritative)
http://docs.oasis-open.org/search-ws/searchRetrieve/v1.0/searchRetrieve-v1.0-part1-apd.html
http://docs.oasis-open.org/search-ws/searchRetrieve/v1.0/searchRetrieve-v1.0-part1-apd.pdf
Technical Committee:
Chairs:
Ray Denenberg (rden@loc.gov), Library of Congress
Matthew Dovey (m.dovey@jisc.ac.uk), JISC Executive, University of Bristol
Editors:
Ray Denenberg (rden@loc.gov), Library of Congress
Larry Dixson (ldix@loc.gov), Library of Congress
Ralph Levan (levan@oclc.org), OCLC
Janifer Gatenby (Janifer.Gatenby@oclc.org), OCLC
Tony Hammond (t.hammond@nature.com), Nature Publishing Group
Matthew Dovey (m.dovey@jisc.ac.uk), JISC Executive, University of Bristol
Additional artifacts:
Related work:
Abstract:
This document is the Abstract Protocol Definition (APD) for searchRetrieve operation, one of a set of documents for the OASIS Search Web Services (SWS) initiative. It presents the model for the SearchRetrieve operation and serves as a guideline for the development of application protocol bindings describing the capabilities and general characteristic of a server or search engine, and how it is to be accessed. It defines abstract request parameters and abstract response elements; bindings indicate the corresponding actual names of the parameters and elements to be transmitted in a request or response.
Status:
This document was last revised or approved by the membership of OASIS on the above date. The level of approval is also listed above. Check the “Latest version” location noted above for possible later revisions of this document.
Technical Committee members should send comments on this specification to the Technical Committee’s email list. Others should send comments to the Technical Committee by using the “Send A Comment” button on the Technical Committee’s web page at http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/search-ws/.
For information on whether any patents have been disclosed that may be essential to implementing this specification, and any offers of patent licensing terms, please refer to the Intellectual Property Rights section of the Technical Committee web page (http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/search-ws/ipr.php).
Citation format:
When referencing this specification the following citation format should be used:
[SearchRetrievePt1]
searchRetrieve: Part 1. Abstract Protocol Definition Version 1.0. 30 January 2013. OASIS Standard. http://docs.oasis-open.org/search-ws/searchRetrieve/v1.0/os/part1-apd/searchRetrieve-v1.0-os-part1-apd.html.
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Table of Contents
2.2 Abstract Parameters and elements
4 Abstract Parameters and Elements of the SWS searchRetrieve Operation
4.3 Parameter and Elements Descriptions
Appendix B. Description Language
B.1 Introduction and Background
B.4 Description File Components
This is one of a set of documents for the OASIS Search Web Services (SWS) initiative.
This document is the Abstract Protocol Definition (APD) for searchRetrieve operation. It presents the model for the SearchRetrieve operation and serves as a guideline for the development of application protocol bindings describing the capabilities and general characteristic of a server or search engine, and how it is to be accessed.
Most importantly, the APD defines abstract request parameters and abstract response elements; a binding indicates the corresponding actual names of the parameters and elements to be transmitted in a request or response.
This collection of documents includes three binding (see list).
Included also in this collection is the CQL (Contextual Query Language) specification. CQL is a formal query language; SRU requires the use of CQL.
Scan, a companion protocol to SRU, supports index browsing, to help a user formulate a query. The Scan specification is also one of the documents in this collection.
Finally, the Explain specification describes a server’s Explain file, which provides information for a client to access, query and process results from that server.
The documents in the collection of specifications are:
2. APD
3. SRU1.2
4. SRU2.0
5. OpenSearch
6. CQL
7. Scan
8. Explain
The key words “MUST”, “MUST NOT”, “REQUIRED”, “SHALL”, “SHALL NOT”, “SHOULD”, “SHOULD NOT”, “RECOMMENDED”, “MAY”, and “OPTIONAL” in this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
All references for the set of documents in this collection are supplied in the Overview document:
searchRetrieve: Part 0. Overview Version 1.0
All XML namespaces for the set of documents in this collection are supplied in the Overview document: searchRetrieve: Part 0. Overview Version 1.0
An application protocol binding (hereafter binding, see definitional note) describes the capabilities and general characteristic of a server or search engine, and how it is to be accessed.
A binding may describe a class of servers via a human-readable document (sometimes known as a profile, but that term is not used in this standard); or a binding may be a machine-readable file describing a single server, provided by that server, according to the description language.
Thus there are two primary types of bindings of interest to this abstract protocol definition: static and dynamic.
- A static binding is specified by a human-readable document. A server is known to operate according to that binding at a specific endpoint.
- A dynamic binding is a machine-readable description file that the server provides.
There is also a third binding type of interest:
- An intermediate binding is specified by a human-readable document, however it binds to one or more dynamic bindings. See Note about Intermediate Bindings. From the point of view of this Abstract Protocol Definition, intermediate bindings are treated as static bindings.
Corresponding to the concepts of static and dynamic bindings, there are two major premises of this standard.
-
One premise is that concrete specifications, in the form of
static bindings, will be developed and that this abstract protocol definition
is to be the foundation for their development, ensuring compatibility among
these bindings.
In this regard it is important to note that this document is not a protocol
specification. The static bindings derived from this document are protocol
specifications. Examples are SRU 1.1, SRU 2.0, and OpenSearch.
- Another premise is that any server, even one that existed prior to development of this standard, need only to provide a dynamic binding, that is, a self-description. It need make no other changes in order to be accessible. Furthermore, a client will be able to access any server that provides a description, if only it implements the capability to read the description file and interpret the description, and based on that description to formulate a request (including a query) and interpret the response.
In addition to application protocol bindings, there are auxiliary bindings, for example, to bind an application protocol binding to ATOM, or to bind the result to SOAP. However, these auxiliary bindings are not of concern to this abstract protocol definition and are not mentioned further in this document; so this document may refer to application protocol bindings unambiguously as “bindings”.
The APD defines abstract request parameters and abstract response elements (see Abstract Parameters and Elements of the SWS searchRetrieve Operation). Corresponding to these abstract parameter and element names, a binding lists actual names for each of the parameter or element to be transmitted in a request or response.
Example.
The APD defines the abstract parameter ‘startPosition’ as “The position within the result set of the first item to be returned.“ And the SRU bindings refer to that abstract parameter and note that its name, as used in those specifications is ‘startRecord’. Thus the request parameter ‘startRecord’ in those bindings represents the abstract parameter startPosition in the APD.
Different bindings may use different names to represent this same abstract parameter, and its semantics may differ across those bindings as the binding models differ. It is the responsibility of the binding to explain these differences in terms of their respective models.
This section describes an abstract data model, abstract processing model, and abstract result set model. A binding of this Abstract Protocol Definition should describe its data model, processing model, and result set model in terms of these abstract models.
A server exposes a datastore for access by a remote client for purposes of search and retrieval. The datastore is a collection of units of data. Such a unit is referred to as an abstract item in this model. For purposes of this model there is a single datastore at any given server.
Notes:
· Bindings may use different terminology for various terms:
o For “abstract item”: “record” or “abstract record”, for example.
o “datastore”: “database”.
o “server”:. “search engine”.
· Whenever a binding does use alternative terminology, it should note the alternative usage, referring to the original terminology used in this document.
Associated with a datastore are one or more formats that the server may apply to an abstract item,
Resulting in an exportable structure referred to as a response Item.
Note:
the term item is often used in this document in place of “abstract item”
or “response item” when the meaning is clear from the context or when the
distinction is not important.
Such a format is referred to as a response item type or item type. It represents a common understanding shared by the client and server of the information contained in the items of the datastore, to allow the transfer of that information. It does not represent nor does it constrain the internal representation or storage of that information at the server.
Note:
Bindings may use different terminology for “item type”, for example “schema”.
A client sends a searchRetrieve request to a server; which responds with a searchRetrieve response. The request includes a search query to be matched against the items at the server’s datastore. The server processes the query, creating a result set (see Result Set Model) of items that match the query. The server may also partition the result set into result groups.
Notes:
· Bindings may use different terminology for:
o “result group”. For example “page”.
o “searchRetrieve request”. For example “query”. And in turn, that binding would refer to a “query” (as defined in this document) with different terminology, for example “search terms”.
The request also indicates either the desired number of items or the desired group (by group number) to be included in the response, and includes information about how the individual items in the response, as well as the response at large, are to be formatted.
The response includes items from the result set, diagnostic information, and a result set identifier that the client may use in a subsequent, refining request to retrieve additional items.
This is a logical model; result sets may or may not be supported by a given binding.
There are applications where result sets are critical; on the other hand there are applications where result sets are not viable. An example of the first might be scientific investigation of a database with comparison of data sets produced at different times. An example of the latter might be a very frequently used database of web pages in which persistent result sets would be an impossible burden on the infrastructure due to the frequency of use.
When a query is processed, a set of items is selected, and that set is represented by a result set, maintained at the server. The result set, logically, is an ordered list of references to the items. Once created, a result set cannot be modified; any operation that would somehow change a result set, instead, creates a new result set. Each result set is referenced via a unique identifying string, generated by the server when the result set is created.
From the client point of view, the result set is a set of abstract items each referenced by an ordinal number, beginning with 1.The client may request a given item from a result set according to a specific format. For example the client may request item 1 in the Dublin Core format, and subsequently request item 1 in the MODS [7] format. The format in which items are supplied is not a property of the result set, nor is it a property of the abstract items as a member of the result set; the result set is simply the ordered list of abstract items.
A server might support requests by item (as in the preceding paragraph) or it may instead support requests by group. It may support one form only or both.
The items in a result set are not necessarily ordered according to any specific or predictable scheme. The server determines the order of the result set, unless it has been created with a request that includes a sort specification. (In that case, only the final sorted result set is considered to exist, even if the server internally creates a temporary result set and then sorts it. The unsorted, temporary result set is not considered to have ever existed, for purposed of this model.) In any case, the order must not change. If a result set is created and subsequently sorted, a new result set must be created.
Thus, suppose an abstract item is deleted or otherwise becomes unavailable while a result set which references that item still exists. This MUST not cause re-ordering. For example, if a client retrieves items 1 through 3, and subsequently item 2 becomes unavailable, if the server again requests item 3, it must be the same item 3 (see note) that was returned as item 3 in the earlier operation. (If the server requests item 2 and it is no longer available, the server should supply a diagnostic in place of the response item for item 2. Bindings should specify this mechanism in more detail.)
“Same item” does not necessarily mean the same content; the item’s content may have changed.
Abstract request parameters are listed in Table 1 and abstract response elements in Table 2. A binding should list applicable abstract parameters and elements and indicate the corresponding actual name of the parameter or element to be transmitted in a request or response.
Note about Intermediate Bindings
Some bindings are “intermediate bindings”. Similar to static bindings, they are specified in human-readable form, however for intermediate bindings, although the abstract parameters correspond to actual parameters in the binding, the binding is in turn another abstract protocol definition and the actual parameters become abstract parameter to be mapped to the real actual parameters via dynamic bindings. The OpenSearch binding is an example. For purposes of this Abstract Protocol Definition, these intermediate bindings are treated as static bindings.
The actual name listed in a binding SHOULD be the same as the abstract name, unless there is a reason for it to differ, for example, when a server expects a specific name.
A binding may exclude a particular parameter or element (declare that it is not used). A binding should indicate for every parameter and element used whether it is mandatory or optional, if it is repeatable, and any other usage rules or constraints. A binding may define additional parameters and elements not listed in this abstract protocol definition.
A static binding SHOULD include a table of (or should otherwise list) the request parameters and response elements used in that binding. In addition it should include the following information:
The Table below shows the abstract parameters of the SWS searchRetrieve request, including brief descriptions as well as links to more detailed descriptions.
Abstract Parameter Name |
Description |
e.g. 'text/html', ‘application/atom+xml’ , application/xml+sru |
|
The search query of the request. |
|
The requested position within the result set of the first item to be returned. |
|
The number of items requested to be returned. |
|
The number of the result group requested to be returned. |
|
e.g. string, jpeg, dc, iso2709. From list provided by server. |
|
The requested order of the result set. |
The Table below shows the abstract elements of the SWS searchResponse response including brief descriptions. For more detailed descriptions follow the link provided with the abstract element name.
Table 2: Response Elements
Abstract Element Name |
Description |
The number of items matched by the query. |
|
The number of result groups in the result set. |
|
The identifier for the result set created by the query. |
|
An individual response item (one of possibly many). |
|
The next position within the result set following the final returned item. |
|
The next result group following the group being returned. |
|
Error message and/or diagnostics. |
|
The server may echo the request back to the client. |
The responseFormat parameter of the request indicates the type of response to be supplied. This SHOULD be an IANA media/mime type. Examples: 'text/html', 'application/xhtml+xml', ‘application/xml’, ‘application/atom+xml’, ‘application/x+sru’.
The query parameter of the request contains a search query to be matched against the datastore at the server creating a result set of items that match the query.
The startPosition parameter of the request indicates the desired position within the result set of the first item to be returned.
(If the startPosition parameter is included in the request, then the group parameter should not be included. )
For example if the value of this parameter is 2, and the value of the maximumItems parameter is 3, then the request is for items 2, 3, and 4.
Possible values of this parameter are specified in bindings. For example a binding might say that the value must be a positive integer, and that if the request is for the first item within the result set, the value is 1. Another binding might allow the value ‘first’ or ‘last’, or ‘next’. Default value if this parameter is not supplied and expected server behavior when an invalid value is supplied may be specified by a binding, fixed at a server, or determined by the server for each request.
For example, if the parameter is not supplied, the server might always begin with the next item (following the last item supplied in the previous operation) or might always begin with the first item. If an invalid value is supplied, for example the value 10 when there are only nine items, the server might not send any items and instead return a diagnostic, or it may begin with the 9th item, or the first item.
The maximumItems parameter of the request indicates the number of items requested to be included in the response. Possible values of this parameter are specified in bindings. For example a binding might say that the value must be an integer, and 0 or greater. Another binding might allow the value ‘all’. The default value if not supplied may be specified by a binding, fixed at a server, or determined by the server for each request. The server might return less than this number of items, for example if there are fewer matching items than requested, or might declare an error if it cannot return the requested number. The server might return more than this number of items; a binding may indicate that the server will not return more than this number of items, or it may indicate that it might.
The group parameter of the request indicates the desired result group to be returned.
(If the group parameter is included in the request, then the startPosition parameter should not be included.)
Possible values of this parameter are specified in bindings. For example a binding might say that the value must be a positive integer, and that if the request is for the first result group within the result set, the value is 1. Another binding might allow the value ‘first’ or ‘last’, or ‘next’. Default value if this parameter is not supplied and expected server behavior when an invalid value is supplied may be specified by a binding, fixed at a server, or determined by the server for each request.
For example, if the parameter is not supplied, the server might always begin with the next result group (following the last result group supplied in the previous operation) or might always begin with the first result group. If an invalid value is supplied, for example the value 10 when there are only nine groups, the server might not send any group and instead return a diagnostic, or it may send the 9th group, or the first group.
The responseItemType parameter of the request indicates the format to be used for the items in the response.
The sortOrder parameter of the request indicates the requested order of the result set, for example, which field to sort on, ascending or descending, and so forth.
The numberOfItems element of the response is the number of items matched by the query (the cardinality of the result set). Possible values of this element are specified in bindings. For example a binding might say that the value must be an integer, and 0 or greater. Another binding might list string values with semantics like “unknown” or “too many to count”, or a structured value with a number and a confidence level.
The numberOfGroups element of the response is the number of result groups, if the server has partitioned the result set into groups. Possible values of this element are specified in bindings. For example a binding might say that the value must be an integer, and 0 or greater. Another binding might list string values with semantics like “unknown” or “too many to count”, or a structured value with a number and a confidence level.
If the server supports result sets, it may include the resultSetId element in the response, to be used in a subsequent request, for example to retrieve additional items from the result set, to sort the result set, or to refine the search. (Bindings should specify the mechanism to carry out these functions.)
There will be varying degrees of result set support, for example a server might only support one result set at a time. However the server should attempt to assign a unique name for every result set created so that even when a result sets ceases to exist the client will not mistakenly request items from a new set when meaning to refer to a previous set with the same identifier.
An item element of the response (one of possibly many) is one of the items that the server is attempting to return.
The nextPosition element of the response indicates the next position within the result set following the final returned item. For example if the result set has six items and the response included items 1 through 4, then the value of this element would be 5.
Possible values of this element are specified in bindings. For example a binding might say that the value must be an integer, and 1 or greater. Another binding might allow string values, for example, ‘end’, indicating that the final returned item was the last. If the result set has six items and the response included items 1 through 6, this might be considered a special case and a binding might declare that the value of nextPosition in this case be 1, or it might specify a special string, for example “done”.
The nextGroup element of the response indicates the next result group following the group being returned (meaningful only if the server is responding to a request for a group request rather than a request for items).
Possible values of this element are specified in bindings. For example a binding might say that the value must be an integer, and 1 or greater. Another binding might allow string values, for example, ‘end’, indicating that the final returned item was the last.
The server should supply diagnostics and error messages as appropriate. Bindings should describe relevant details including how diagnostics are to be included and encoded within a response.
In the echoedRequest element of the response, the server may echo the request back to the client along with the response. This is for the benefit of thin clients (such as a web browser) who may not have the facility to remember the query that generated the response it has just received. The manner in which the server encodes the echoed request is specified in bindings.
Examples are provided in (non-normative) annex "Description Language".
A conformance clause for a specification describes requirements that a product which implements the specification must meet in order to conform to the specification. It helps a customer of a product which claims to implements a specification determine whether the product conforms or does not conform to that specification.
This specification prescribes the construction of an application protocol binding. This conformance clause therefore specifies what a binding must include in order to claim conformance to this specification.
· Whenever a binding uses terminology that differs from the terminology used in this specification, it MUST note the alternative usage, referring to the original terminology used in this document.
· Whenever a binding employs a model that differs from a corresponding model used in this specification (e.g. data model, processing model, result set model) it MUST note the alternative usage, referring to the original model used in this document.
· A binding MUST list all request parameter and response elements and indicate for each whether it is mandatory or optional, if it is repeatable, and any other usage rules or constraints. It should relate every request parameter to an abstract request parameter if there is one, and every response element to an abstract response element if there is one. It MUST describe any usage specific to that binding which deviates from the usage described in this document.
· A binding SHOULD list any excluded abstract request parameter and abstract response element, that is, any such parameter or element listed in this specification that has no corresponding parameter in the binding.
· A binding SHOULD also include a separate list of request parameters and response elements that that have no corresponding abstract request parameter or abstract response element.
Acknowlegements are supplied in the Overview document: searchRetrieve: Part 0. Overview Version 1.0
Non-normative Annex
B.1 Introduction and Background
As mentioned in the introduction, a binding describes the capabilities and general characteristic of a search engine and how it may be accessed. A binding may be a human-readable document (a static binding), or a machine-readable file (a dynamic binding) provided by that server according to the SWS Description Language, a component of the SWS standard.
A premise of this standard is:
· A client will be able to access any search engine that provides a description, if only it implements the capability to read the description file and interpret the description, and based on that description to formulate a request (including a query) and interpret the response.
The description language has not yet been developed, and is not part of the initial phase of the work of the OASIS SWS Technical Committee. It is left for future work. The purpose of this annex is to describe a hypothetical example of a description file.
A description file may be provided by a server to describe itself, how it can be queried, and how query results may be interpreted.
Thus there are logically six parts to a description file:
When more than one abstract process is defined, the description file may need to include descriptions for each abstract process. At minimum “how to formulate a request” (2) would differ for different abstract processes.
The following is a hypothetical description file. It has three sections:
<sws>
<!-- -->
<databaseInfo>
<name>Science Fiction Database</name>
<shortName>SciFi</shortName>
<contact>
<name>Ralph LeVan</name>
<email>levan@oclc.org</email>
</contact>
</databaseInfo>
<!-- -->
<requestInfo>
<template>
http://orlabs.oclc.org/SRW/search/scifi
?query=cql.any+%3D+%22{query}%22&version=1.1
&operation=searchRetrieve&maximumRecords={maximumItems}
&startRecord={startPosition}
</template>
<example>
http://orlabs.oclc.org/SRW/search/scifi
?query=cql.any+%3D+%22ninja+turtles%22&version=1.1
&operation=searchRetrieve&maximumRecords=10&startRecord=1
</example>
</requestInfo>
<!-- -->
<responseInfo type='xml' xmlns:srw='http://www.loc.gov/zing/srw/'>
<numberOfItems>
<tagpath>/srw:searchRetrieveResponse/numberOfRecords</tagpath>
</numberOfItems>
<item>
<tagpath>
/srw:searchRetrieveResponse/srw:records/srw:record/srw:recordData
</tagpath>
</item>
<diagnostics>
<tagpath>/srw:searchRetrieveResponse/srw:diagnostics</tagpath>
</diagnostics>
</responseInfo>
</sws>
B.4 Description File Components
The general description component includes general information about the search engine, for example, contact information.
As seen in the example, the request information includes a request template and an example.
The request template includes abstract parameter names enclosed in curly brackets. When valid values for the respective parameters are substituted for the abstract parameter names the result is a valid request.
For example, the template includes:
maximumRecords={maximumItems}
which says in effect that the actual parameter name for the abstract parameter maximumItems is maximumRecords.
In the above example an XPath expression (element <tagPath>) is supplied
corresponding to an abstract parameter, indicating where in the response XML that parameter may be found.
For example,
<item>
<tagpath>
/srw:searchRetrieveResponse/srw:records/srw:record/srw:recordData
</tagpath>
</item>
says that the XPath expression to find an element corresponding to the abstract element <item> is:
/srw:searchRetrieveResponse/srw:records/srw:record/srw:recordData