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rfc:rfc2731

Network Working Group J. Kunze Request for Comments: 2731 Dublin Core Category: Informational Metadata Initiative

                                                         December 1999
               Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML

Status of this Memo

 This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
 not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
 memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

1. Abstract

 The Dublin Core [DC1] is a small set of metadata elements for
 describing information resources.  This document explains how these
 elements are expressed using the META and LINK tags of HTML
 [HTML4.0].  A sequence of metadata elements embedded in an HTML file
 is taken to be a description of that file.  Examples illustrate
 conventions allowing interoperation with current software that
 indexes, displays, and manipulates metadata, such as [SWISH-E],
 [freeWAIS-sf2.0], [GLIMPSE], [HARVEST], [ISEARCH], etc., and the Perl
 [PERL] scripts in the appendix.

2. HTML, Dublin Core, and Non-Dublin Core Metadata

 The Dublin Core (DC) metadata initiative [DCHOME] has produced a
 small set of resource description categories [DC1], or elements of
 metadata (literally, data about data).  Metadata elements are
 typically small relative to the resource they describe and may, if
 the resource format permits, be embedded in it.  Two such formats are
 the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) and the Extensible Markup
 Language (XML); HTML is currently in wide use, but once standardized,
 XML [XML] in conjunction with the Resource Description Framework
 [RDF] promise a significantly more expressive means of encoding
 metadata.  The [RDF] specification actually describes a way to use
 RDF within an HTML document by adhering to an abbreviated syntax.

Kunze Informational [Page 1] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

 This document explains how to encode metadata using HTML 4.0
 [HTML4.0].  It is not concerned with element semantics, which are
 defined elsewhere.  For illustrative purposes, some element semantics
 are alluded to, but in no way should semantics appearing here be
 considered definitive.
 The HTML encoding allows elements of DC metadata to be interspersed
 with non-DC elements (provided such mixing is consistent with rules
 governing use of those non-DC elements).  A DC element is indicated
 by the prefix "DC", and a non-DC element by another prefix; for
 example, the prefix "AC" is used with elements from the A-Core [AC].

3. The META Tag

 The META tag of HTML is designed to encode a named metadata element.
 Each element describes a given aspect of a document or other
 information resource.  For example, this tagged metadata element,
     <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
           content = "Simpson, Homer">
 says that Homer Simpson is the Creator, where the element named
 Creator is defined in the DC element set.  In the more general form,
     <meta name    = "PREFIX.ELEMENT_NAME"
           content = "ELEMENT_VALUE">
 the capitalized words are meant to be replaced in actual
 descriptions; thus in the example,
           ELEMENT_NAME   was:  Creator
           ELEMENT_VALUE  was:  Simpson, Homer
           and PREFIX     was:  DC
 Within a META tag the first letter of a Dublin Core element name is
 capitalized.  DC places no restriction on alphabetic case in an
 element value and any number of META tagged elements may appear
 together, in any order.  More than one DC element with the same name
 may appear, and each DC element is optional.  The next example is a
 book description with two authors, two titles, and no other metadata.
     <meta name    = "DC.Title"
           content = "The Communist Manifesto">
     <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
           content = "Marx, K.">

Kunze Informational [Page 2] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

     <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
           content = "Engels, F.">
     <meta name    = "DC.Title"
           content = "Capital">
 The prefix "DC" precedes each Dublin Core element encoded with META,
 and it is separated by a period (.) from the element name following
 it.  Each non-DC element should be encoded with a prefix that can be
 used to trace its origin and definition; the linkage between prefix
 and element definition is made with the LINK tag, as explained in the
 next section.  Non-DC elements, such as Email from the A-Core [AC],
 may appear together with DC elements, as in
     <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
           content = "Da Costa, Jos&eacute;">
     <meta name    = "AC.Email"
           content = "dacostaj@peoplesmail.org">
     <meta name    = "DC.Title"
           content = "Jesse &#34;The Body&#34; Ventura--A Biography">
 This example also shows how some special characters may be encoded.
 The author name in the first element contains a diacritic encoded as
 an HTML character entity reference -- in this case an accented letter
 E.  Similarly, the last line contains two double-quote characters
 encoded so as to avoid being interpreted as element content
 delimiters.

4. The LINK Tag

 The LINK tag of HTML may be used to associate an element name prefix
 with the reference definition of the element set that it identifies.
 A sequence of META tags describing a resource is incomplete without
 one such LINK tag for each different prefix appearing in the
 sequence.  The previous example could be considered complete with the
 addition of these two LINK tags:
     <link rel     = "schema.DC"
           href    = "http://purl.org/DC/elements/1.0/">
     <link rel     = "schema.AC"
           href    = "http://metadata.net/ac/2.0/">
 In general, the association takes the form
     <link rel     = "schema.PREFIX"
           href    = "LOCATION_OF_DEFINITION">

Kunze Informational [Page 3] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

 where, in actual descriptions, PREFIX is to be replaced by the prefix
 and LOCATION_OF_DEFINITION by the URL or URN of the defining
 document.  When embedded in the HEAD part of an HTML file, a sequence
 of LINK and META tags describes the information in the surrounding
 HTML file itself.  Here is a complete HTML file with its own embedded
 description.
     <html>
     <head>
     <title> A Dirge </title>
     <link rel     = "schema.DC"
           href    = "http://purl.org/DC/elements/1.0/">
     <meta name    = "DC.Title"
           content = "A Dirge">
     <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
           content = "Shelley, Percy Bysshe">
     <meta name    = "DC.Type"
           content = "poem">
     <meta name    = "DC.Date"
           content = "1820">
     <meta name    = "DC.Format"
           content = "text/html">
     <meta name    = "DC.Language"
           content = "en">
     </head>
     <body><pre>
             Rough wind, that moanest loud
               Grief too sad for song;
             Wild wind, when sullen cloud
               Knells all the night long;
             Sad storm, whose tears are vain,
             Bare woods, whose branches strain,
             Deep caves and dreary main, -
               Wail, for the world's wrong!
     </pre></body>
     </html>

5. Encoding Recommendations

 HTML allows more flexibility in principle and in practice than is
 recommended here for encoding metadata.  Limited flexibility
 encourages easy development of software for extracting and processing
 metadata.  At this early evolutionary stage of internet metadata,
 easy prototyping and experimentation hastens the development of
 useful standards.

Kunze Informational [Page 4] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

 Adherence is therefore recommended to the tagging style exemplified
 in this document as regards prefix and element name capitalization,
 double-quoting (") of attribute values, and not starting more than
 one META tag on a line.  There is much room for flexibility, but
 choosing a style and sticking with it will likely make metadata
 manipulation and editing easier.  The following META tags adhere to
 the recommendations and carry identical metadata in three different
 styles:
     <META NAME="DC.Format"
           CONTENT="text/html; 12 Kbytes">
     <meta
             Content = "text/html; 12 Kbytes"
             Name = "DC.Format"
     >
     <meta name = "DC.Format" content = "text/html; 12 Kbytes">
 Use of these recommendations is known to result in metadata that may
 be harvested, indexed, and manipulated by popular, freely available
 software packages such as [SWISH-E], [freeWAIS-sf2.0], [GLIMPSE],
 [HARVEST], and [ISEARCH], among others.  These conventions also work
 with the metadata processing scripts appearing in the appendix, as
 well as with most of the [DCPROJECTS] applications referenced from
 the [DCHOME] site.  Software support for the LINK tag and qualifier
 conventions (see the next section) is not currently widespread.
 Ordering of metadata elements is not preserved in general.  Writers
 of software for metadata indexing and display should try to preserve
 relative ordering among META tagged elements having the same name
 (e.g., among multiple authors), however, metadata providers and
 searchers have no guarantee that ordering will be preserved in
 metadata that passes through unknown systems.

6. Dublin Core in Real Descriptions

 In actual resource description it is often necessary to qualify
 Dublin Core elements to add nuances of meaning.  While neither the
 general principles nor the specific semantics of DC qualifiers are
 within scope of this document, everyday uses of the qualifier syntax
 are illustrated to lend realism to later examples.  Without further
 explanation, the three ways in which the optional qualifier syntax is
 currently (subject to change) used to supplement the META tag may be
 summarized as follows:
  <meta lang    = "LANGUAGE_OF_METADATA_CONTENT" ... >
  <meta scheme  = "CONTROLLED_FORMAT_OR_VOCABULARY_OF_METADATA" ... >

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  <meta name    = "PREFIX.ELEMENT_NAME.SUBELEMENT_NAME" ... >
 Accordingly, a posthumous work in Spanish might be described with
     <meta name    = "DC.Language"
           scheme  = "rfc1766"
           content = "es">
     <meta name    = "DC.Title"
           lang    = "es"
           content = "La Mesa Verde y la Silla Roja">
     <meta name    = "DC.Title"
           lang    = "en"
           content = "The Green Table and the Red Chair">
     <meta name    = "DC.Date.Created"
           content = "1935">
     <meta name    = "DC.Date.Available"
           content = "1939">
 Note that the qualifier syntax and label suffixes (which follow an
 element name and a period) used in examples in this document merely
 reflect current trends in the HTML encoding of qualifiers.  Use of
 this syntax and these suffixes is neither a standard nor a
 recommendation.

7. Encoding Dublin Core Elements

 This section consists of very simple Dublin Core encoding examples,
 arranged by element.
 Title (name given to the resource)
 -----
  <meta name    = "DC.Title"
        content = "Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon contamination">
  <meta name    = "DC.Title"
        content = "Crime and Punishment">
  <meta name    = "DC.Title"
        content = "Methods of Information in Medicine, Vol 32, No 4">
  <meta name    = "DC.Title"
        content = "Still life #4 with flowers">
  <meta name    = "DC.Title"
        lang    = "de"
        content = "Das Wohltemperierte Klavier, Teil I">

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 Creator (entity that created the content)
 -------
  <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
        content = "Gogh, Vincent van">
  <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
        content = "van Gogh, Vincent">
  <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
        content = "Mao Tse Tung">
  <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
        content = "Mao, Tse Tung">
  <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
        content = "Plato">
  <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
        lang    = "fr"
        content = "Platon">
  <meta name    = "DC.Creator.Director"
        content = "Sturges, Preston">
  <meta name    = "DC.Creator.Writer"
        content = "Hecht, Ben">
  <meta name    = "DC.Creator.Producer"
        content = "Chaplin, Charles">
 Subject (topic or keyword)
 -------
  <meta name    = "DC.Subject"
        content = "heart attack">
  <meta name    = "DC.Subject"
        scheme  = "MESH"
        content = "Myocardial Infarction; Pericardial Effusion">
  <meta name    = "DC.Subject"
        content = "vietnam war">
  <meta name    = "DC.Subject"
        scheme  = "LCSH"
        content = "Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975">
  <meta name    = "DC.Subject"
        content = "Friendship">
  <meta name    = "DC.Subject"
        scheme  = "ddc"
        content = "158.25">

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 Description (account, summary, or abstract of the content)
 -----------
  <meta name    = "DC.Description"
        lang    = "en"
        content = "The Author gives some Account of Himself and Family
                   -- His First Inducements to Travel -- He is
                   Shipwrecked, and Swims for his Life -- Gets safe on
                   Shore in the Country of Lilliput -- Is made a
                   Prisoner, and carried up the Country">
  <meta name    = "DC.Description"
        content = "A tutorial and reference manual for Java.">
  <meta name    = "DC.Description"
        content = "Seated family of five, coconut trees to the left,
                   sailboats moored off sandy beach to the right,
                   with volcano in the background.">
 Publisher (entity that made the resource available)
 ---------
  <meta name    = "DC.Publisher"
        content = "O'Reilly">
  <meta name    = "DC.Publisher"
        content = "Digital Equipment Corporation">
  <meta name    = "DC.Publisher"
        content = "University of California Press">
  <meta name    = "DC.Publisher"
        content = "State of Florida (USA)">
 Contributor (other entity that made a contribution)
 -----------
  <meta name    = "DC.Contributor"
        content = "Curie, Marie">
  <meta name    = "DC.Contributor.Photographer"
        content = "Adams, Ansel">
  <meta name    = "DC.Contributor.Artist"
        content = "Sendak, Maurice">
  <meta name    = "DC.Contributor.Editor"
        content = "Starr, Kenneth">

Kunze Informational [Page 8] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

 Date (of an event in the life of the resource; [WTN8601] recommended)
 ----
  <meta name    = "DC.Date"
        content = "1972">
  <meta name    = "DC.Date"
        content = "1998-05-14">
  <meta name    = "DC.Date"
        scheme  = "WTN8601"
        content = "1998-05-14">
  <meta name    = "DC.Date.Created"
        content = "1998-05-14">
  <meta name    = "DC.Date.Available"
        content = "1998-05-21">
  <meta name    = "DC.Date.Valid"
        content = "1998-05-28">
  <meta name    = "DC.Date.Created"
        content = "triassic">
  <meta name    = "DC.Date.Acquired"
        content = "1957">
  <meta name    = "DC.Date.Accepted"
        scheme  = "WTN8601"
        content = "1998-12-02T16:59">
  <meta name    = "DC.Date.DataGathered"
        scheme  = "ISO8601"
        content = "98-W49-3T1659">
  <meta name    = "DC.Date.Issued"
        scheme  = "ANSI.X3.X30-1985"
        content = "19980514">
 Type (nature, genre, or category; [DCT1] recommended)
 ----
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        content = "poem">
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        scheme  = "DCT1"
        content = "software">
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        content = "software program source code">

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  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        content = "interactive video game">
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        scheme  = "DCT1"
        content = "dataset">
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        content = "web home page">
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        content = "web bibliography">
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        content = "painting">
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        content = "image; woodblock">
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        scheme  = "AAT"
        content = "clipeus (portrait)">
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        lang    = "en-US"
        content = "image; advertizement">
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        scheme  = "DCT1"
        content = "event">
  <meta name    = "DC.Type"
        content = "event; periodic">
 Format (physical or digital data format, plus optional dimensions)
 ------
  <meta name    = "DC.Format"
        content = "text/xml">
  <meta name    = "DC.Format"
        scheme  = "IMT"
        content = "text/xml">
  <meta name    = "DC.Format"
        scheme  = "IMT"
        content = "image/jpeg">
  <meta name    = "DC.Format"
        content = "A text file with mono-spaced tables and diagrams.">
  <meta name    = "DC.Format"
        content = "video/mpeg; 14 minutes">

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  <meta name    = "DC.Format"
        content = "unix tar archive, gzip compressed; 1.5 Mbytes">
  <meta name    = "DC.Format"
        content = "watercolor; 23 cm x 31 cm">
 Identifier (of the resource)
 ----------
  <meta name    = "DC.Identifier"
        content = "http://foo.bar.org/zaf/">
  <meta name    = "DC.Identifier"
        content = "urn:ietf:rfc:1766">
  <meta name    = "DC.Identifier"
        scheme  = "ISBN"
        content = "1-56592-149-6">
  <meta name    = "DC.Identifier"
        scheme  = "LCCN"
        content = "67-26020">
  <meta name    = "DC.Identifier"
        scheme  = "DOI"
        content = "10.12345/33-824688ab">
 Source (reference to the resource's origin)
 ------
  <meta name    = "DC.Source"
        content = "Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet">
  <meta name    = "DC.Source"
        content = "http://a.b.org/manon/">
 Language (of the content of the resource; [RFC1766] recommended)
 --------
  <meta name    = "DC.Language"
        content = "en">
  <meta name    = "DC.Language"
        scheme  = "rfc1766"
        content = "en">
  <meta name    = "DC.Language"
        scheme  = "ISO639-2"
        content = "eng">

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  <meta name    = "DC.Language"
        scheme  = "rfc1766"
        content = "en-US">
  <meta name    = "DC.Language"
        content = "zh">
  <meta name    = "DC.Language"
        content = "ja">
  <meta name    = "DC.Language"
        content = "es">
  <meta name    = "DC.Language"
        content = "de">
  <meta name    = "DC.Language"
        content = "german">
  <meta name    = "DC.Language"
        lang    = "fr"
        content = "allemand">
 Relation (reference to a related resource)
 --------
  <meta name    = "DC.Relation.IsPartOf"
        content = "http://foo.bar.org/abc/proceedings/1998/">
  <meta name    = "DC.Relation.IsFormatOf"
        content = "http://foo.bar.org/cd145.sgml">
  <meta name    = "DC.Relation.IsVersionOf"
        content = "http://foo.bar.org/draft9.4.4.2">
  <meta name    = "DC.Relation.References"
        content = "urn:isbn:1-56592-149-6">
  <meta name    = "DC.Relation.IsBasedOn"
        content = "Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet">
  <meta name    = "DC.Relation.Requires"
        content = "LWP::UserAgent; HTML::Parse; URI::URL;
                   Net::DNS; Tk::Pixmap; Tk::Bitmap; Tk::Photo">
 Coverage (extent or scope of the content)
 --------
  <meta name    = "DC.Coverage"
        content = "US civil war era; 1861-1865">

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  <meta name    = "DC.Coverage"
        content = "Columbus, Ohio, USA; Lat: 39 57 N Long: 082 59 W">
  <meta name    = "DC.Coverage"
        scheme  = "TGN"
        content = "Columbus (C,V)">
  <meta name    = "DC.Coverage.Jurisdiction"
        content = "Commonwealth of Australia">
 Rights (text or identifier of a rights management statement)
 ------
  <meta name    = "DC.Rights"
        lang    = "en"
        content = "Copyright Acme 1999 - All rights reserved.">
  <meta name    = "DC.Rights"
        content = "http://foo.bar.org/cgi-bin/terms">

8. Security Considerations

 The syntax rules for encoding Dublin Core metadata in HTML that are
 documented here pose no direct risk to computers and networks.
 People can use these rules to encode metadata that is inaccurate or
 even deliberately misleading (creating mischief in the form of "index
 spam"), however, this reflects a general pattern of HTML META tag
 abuse that is not limited to the encoding of metadata from the Dublin
 Core set.  Even traditional metadata encoding schemes (e.g., [MARC])
 are not immune to inaccuracy, although they are generally followed in
 environments where production quality greatly exceeds that of the
 average Web site.
 Systems that process metadata encoded with META tags need to consider
 issues related to its accuracy and validity as part of their design
 and implementation, and users of such systems need to consider the
 design and implementation assumptions.  Various approaches may be
 relevant for certain applications, such as adding statements of
 metadata provenance, signing of metadata with digital signatures, and
 automating certain aspects of metadata creation; but these are far
 outside the scope of this document and the underlying META tag syntax
 that it describes.

Kunze Informational [Page 13] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

9. Appendix – Perl Scripts that Manipulate HTML Encoded Metadata

 This section contains two simple programs that work with versions 4
 and 5 of the Perl [PERL] scripting language interpreter.  They may be
 taken and freely adapted for local organizational needs, research
 proposals, venture capital bids, etc.  A variety of applications are
 within easy reach of implementors that choose to build on these
 scripts.
 Script 1:  Metadata Format Conversion
 -------------------------------------
 Here is a simple Perl script that correctly recognizes every example
 of metadata encoding in this document.  It shows how a modest
 scripting effort can produce a utility that converts metadata from
 one format to another.  Minor changes are sufficient to support a
 number of output formats.

#!/depot/bin/perl # # This simple perl script extracts metadata embedded in an HTML file # and outputs it in an alternate format. Issues warning about missing # element name or value. # # Handles mixed case tags and attribute values, one per line or spanning # several lines. Also handles a quoted string spanning multiple lines. # No error checking. Does not tolerate more than one "<meta" per line.

print "@(urc;\n"; while (<>) {

      next if (! /<meta/i);
      ($meta) = /(<meta.*$)/i;
      if (! /<meta.*>/i) {
              while (<>) {
                      $meta .= $_;
                      last if (/>/);
              }
      }
      $name     =    $meta =~ /name\s*=\s*"([^"]*)"/i
                      ? $1 : "MISSING ELEMENT NAME";
      $content  = $meta =~ /content\s*=\s*"([^"]*)"/i
                      ? $1 : "MISSING ELEMENT VALUE";
      ($scheme) =  $meta =~ /scheme\s*=\s*"([^"]*)"/i;
      ($lang)   =    $meta =~ /lang\s*=\s*"([^"]*)"/i;
      if ($lang || $scheme) {
              $mod = " ($lang";
              if (! $scheme)

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                      { $mod .= ")"; }
              elsif (! $lang)
                      { $mod .= "$scheme)" }
              else
                      { $mod .= ", $scheme)"; }
      }
      else
              { $mod = ""; }
      print "    @|$name$mod; $content\n";

} print "@)urc;\n"; # —- end of Perl script —-

 When the conversion script is run on the metadata file example from
 the LINK tag section (section 4), it produces the following output.
      @(urc;
          @|DC.Title; A Dirge
          @|DC.Creator; Shelley, Percy Bysshe
          @|DC.Type; poem
          @|DC.Date; 1820
          @|DC.Format; text/html
          @|DC.Language; en
      @)urc;
 Script 2:  Automated Metadata Creation
 --------------------------------------
 The creation and maintenance of high-quality metadata can be
 extremely expensive without automation to assist in processes such as
 supplying pre-set or computed defaults, validating syntax, verifying
 value ranges, spell checking, etc.  Considerable relief could be had
 from a script that reduced an individual provider's metadata burden
 to just the title of each document.  Below is such a script.  It lets
 the provider of an HTML document abbreviate an entire embedded
 resource description using a single HTML comment statement that looks
 like
     <!--metablock Little Red Riding Hood -->
 Our script processes this statement specially as a kind of "metadata
 block" declaration with attached title.  The general form is
     <!--metablock TITLE_OF_DOCUMENT -->

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 This statement works much like a "Web server-side include" in that
 the script replaces it with a fully-specified block of metadata and
 triggers other replacements.  Once installed, the script can output
 HTML files suitable for integration into one's production Web server
 procedures.
 The individual provider keeps a separate "template" file of
 infrequently changing pre-set values for metadata elements.  If the
 provider's needs are simple enough, the only element values besides
 the title that differ from one document to the next may be generated
 automatically.  Using the script, values may be referenced as
 variables from within the template or within the document.  Our
 variable references have the form "(--mbVARNAME)", and here is what
 they look like inside a template:
     <title> (--mbtitle) </title>
     <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
           content = "Simpson, Homer">
     <meta name    = "DC.Title"
           content = "(--mbtitle)">
     <meta name    = "DC.Date.Created"
           content = "(--mbfilemodtime)">
     <meta name    = "DC.Identifier"
           content = "(--mbbaseURL)/(--mbfilename)">
     <meta name    = "DC.Format"
           content = "text/html; (--mbfilesize)">
     <meta name    = "DC.Language"
           content = "(--mblanguage)-BUREAUCRATESE">
     <meta name    = "RC.MetadataAuthority"
           content = "Springfield Nuclear">
     <link rel     = "schema.DC"
           href    = "http://purl.org/DC/elements/1.0/">
     <link rel     = "schema.RC"
           href    = "http://nukes.org/ReactorCore/rc">
 The above template represents the metadata block that will describe
 the document once the variable references are replaced with real
 values.  By the conventions of our script, the following variables
 will be replaced in both the template and in the document:
     (--mbfilesize)            size of the final output file
     (--mbtitle)               title of the document
     (--mblanguage)            language of the document
     (--mbbaseURL)             beginning part of document identifier
     (--mbfilename)            last part (minus .html) of identifier
     (--mbfilemodtime)         last modification date of the document

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 Here's an example HTML file to run the script on.
     <html>
     <head>
     <!--metablock Nutritional Allocation Increase -->
     <meta name    = "DC.Type"
           content = "Memorandum">
     </head>
     <body>
     <p>
     From:  Acting Shift Supervisor
     To:    Plant Control Personnel
     RE:    (--mbtitle)
     Date:  (--mbfilemodtime)
     <p>
     Pursuant to directive DOH:10.2001/405aec of article B-2022,
     subsection 48.2.4.4.1c regarding staff morale and employee
     productivity standards, the current allocation of doughnut
     acquisition funds shall be increased effective immediately.
     </body>
     </html>
 Note that because replacement occurs throughout the document, the
 provider need only enter the title once instead of twice (normally
 the title must be entered once in the HTML head and again in the HTML
 body).  After running the script, the above file is transformed into
 this:
     <html>
     <head>
         <title> Nutritional Allocation Increase </title>
     <meta name    = "DC.Creator"
           content = "Simpson, Homer">
     <meta name    = "DC.Title"
           content = "Nutritional Allocation Increase">
     <meta name    = "DC.Date.Created"
           content = "1999-03-08">
     <meta name    = "DC.Identifier"
           content = "http://moes.bar.com/doh/homer.html">
     <meta name    = "DC.Format"
           content = "text/html;    1320  bytes">
     <meta name    = "DC.Language"
           content = "en-BUREAUCRATESE">
     <meta name    = "RC.MetadataAuthority"
           content = "Springfield Nuclear">
     <link rel     = "schema.DC"
           href    = "http://purl.org/DC/elements/1.0/">
     <link rel     = "schema.RC"

Kunze Informational [Page 17] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

           href    = "http://nukes.org/ReactorCore/rc">
     <meta name    = "DC.Type"
           content = "Memorandum">
     </head>
     <body>
     <p>
     From:  Acting Shift Supervisor
     To:    Plant Control Personnel
     RE:    Nutritional Allocation Increase
     Date:  1999-03-08
     <p>
     Pursuant to directive DOH:10.2001/405aec of article B-2022,
     subsection 48.2.4.4.1c regarding staff morale and employee
     productivity standards, the current allocation of doughnut
     acquisition funds shall be increased effective immediately.
     </body>
     </html>
 Here is the script that accomplishes this transformation.

#!/depot/bin/perl # # This Perl script processes metadata block declarations of the form # <!–metablock TITLE_OF_DOCUMENT –> and variable references of the # form (–mbVARNAME), replacing them with full metadata blocks and # variable values, respectively. Requires a "template" file. # Outputs an HTML file. # # Invoke this script with a single filename argument, "foo". It creates # an output file "foo.html" using a temporary working file "foo.work". # The size of foo.work is measured after variable replacement, and is # later inserted into the file in such a way that the file's size does # not change in the process. Has little or no error checking.

$infile = shift; open(IN, "< $infile")

      or die("Could not open input file \"$infile\"");

$workfile = "$infile.work"; unlink($workfile); open(WORK, "+> $workfile")

      or die("Could not open work file \"$workfile\"");

@offsets = (); # records locations for late size replacement $title = ""; # gets the title during metablock processing $language = "en"; # pre-set language here (not in the template) $baseURL = "http://moes.bar.com/doh"; # pre-set base URL here also $filename = "$infile.html"; # final output filename $filesize = "(–mbfilesize)"; # replaced late (separate pass)

Kunze Informational [Page 18] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

($year, $month, $day) = (localtime( (stat IN) [9] ))[5, 4, 3]; $filemodtime = sprintf "%s-%02s-%02s", 1900 + $year, 1 + $month, $day;

sub putout { # outputs current line with variable replacement

      if (! /\(--mb/) {
              print WORK;
              return;
      }
      if (/\(--mbfilesize\)/)                 # remember where it was
              { push @offsets, tell WORK; }   # but don't replace yet
      s/\(--mbtitle\)/$title/g;
      s/\(--mblanguage\)/$language/g;
      s/\(--mbbaseURL\)/$baseURL/g;
      s/\(--mbfilename\)/$filename/g;
      s/\(--mbfilemodtime\)/$filemodtime/g;
      print WORK;

}

while (<IN>) { # main loop for input file

      if (! /(.*)<!--metablock\s*(.*)/) {
              &putout;
              next;
      }
      $title = $2;
      $_ = $1;
      &putout;
      if ($title =~ s/\s*-->(.*)//) {
              $remainder = $1;
      }
      else {
              while (<IN>) {
                      $title .= $_;
                      last if (/(.*)\s*-->(.*)/);
              }
              $title .= $1;
              $remainder = $2;
      }
      open(TPLATE, "< template")
              or die("Could not open template file");
      while (<TPLATE>)                # subloop for template file
              { &putout; }
      close(TPLATE);
      $_ = $remainder;
      &putout;

Kunze Informational [Page 19] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

} close(IN);

# Now replace filesize variables without altering total byte count. select( (select(WORK), $| = 1) [0] ); # first flush output so we if (($size = -s WORK) < 100000) # can get final file size

      { $scale = 0; }                 # and set scale factor or

else { # compute it, keeping width of size field low

      for ($scale = 0; $size >= 1000; $scale++)
              { $size /= 1024; }

} $filesize = sprintf "%7.7s %sbytes",

      $size, (" ", "K", "M", "G", "T", "P") [$scale];

foreach $pos (@offsets) { # loop through saved size locations

      seek WORK, $pos, 0;             # read the line found there
      $_ = <WORK>;
      # $filesize must be exactly as wide as "(--mbfilesize)"
      s/\(--mbfilesize\)/$filesize/g;
      seek WORK, $pos, 0;             # rewrite it with replacement
      print WORK;

}

close(WORK); rename($workfile, "$filename")

      or die("Could not rename \"$workfile\" to \"$filename\"");

# —- end of Perl script —-

Kunze Informational [Page 20] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

10. Author's Address

 John A. Kunze
 Center for Knowledge Management
 University of California, San Francisco
 530 Parnassus Ave, Box 0840
 San Francisco, CA  94143-0840, USA
 Fax:   +1 415-476-4653
 EMail: jak@ckm.ucsf.edu

11. References

 [AAT]            Art and Architecture Thesaurus, Getty Information
                  Institute.
                  http://shiva.pub.getty.edu/aat_browser/
 [AC]             The A-Core: Metadata about Content Metadata, (in
                  progress)
                  http://metadata.net/ac/draft-iannella-admin-01.txt
 [DC1]            Weibel, S., Kunze, J., Lagoze, C. and M. Wolf,
                  "Dublin Core Metadata for Resource Discovery", RFC
                  2413, September 1998.
                  ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2413.txt
 [DCHOME]         Dublin Core Initiative Home Page.
                  http://purl.org/DC/
 [DCPROJECTS]     Projects Using Dublin Core Metadata.
                  http://purl.org/DC/projects/index.htm
 [DCT1]           Dublin Core Type List 1, DC Type Working Group,
                  March 1999.
                  http://www.loc.gov/marc/typelist.html
 [freeWAIS-sf2.0] The enhanced freeWAIS distribution, February 1999.
                  http://ls6-www.cs.uni-
                  dortmund.de/ir/projects/freeWAIS-sf/
 [GLIMPSE]        Glimpse Home Page.
                  http://glimpse.cs.arizona.edu/
 [HARVEST]        Harvest Web Indexing.
                  http://www.tardis.ed.ac.uk/harvest/

Kunze Informational [Page 21] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

 [HTML4.0]        Hypertext Markup Language 4.0 Specification, April
                  1998.
                  http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/
 [ISEARCH]        Isearch Resources Page.
                  http://www.etymon.com/Isearch/
 [ISO639-2]       Code for the representation of names of languages,
                  1996.
                  http://www.indigo.ie/egt/standards/iso639/iso639-2-
                  en.html
 [ISO8601]        ISO 8601:1988(E), Data elements and interchange
                  formats -- Information interchange -- Representation
                  of dates and times, International Organization for
                  Standardization, June 1988.
                  http://www.iso.ch/markete/8601.pdf
 [MARC]           USMARC Format for Bibliographic Data, US Library of
                  Congress.
                  http://lcweb.loc.gov/marc/marc.html
 [PERL]           L. Wall, T. Christiansen, R. Schwartz, Programming
                  Perl, Second Edition, O'Reilly, 1996.
 [RDF]            Resource Description Framework Model and Syntax
                  Specification, February 1999.
                  http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-rdf-syntax/
 [RFC1766]        Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of
                  Languages", RFC 1766, March 1996.
                  ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1766.txt
 [SWISH-E]        Simple Web Indexing System for Humans - Enhanced.
                  http://sunsite.Berkeley.EDU/SWISH-E/
 [TGN]            Thesaurus of Geographic Names, Getty Information
                  Institute.
                  http://shiva.pub.getty.edu/tgn_browser/
 [WTN8601]        W3C Technical Note - Profile of ISO 8601 Date and
                  Time Formats.
                  http://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime
 [XML]            Extensible Markup Language (XML).
                  http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml

Kunze Informational [Page 22] RFC 2731 Encoding Dublin Core Metadata in HTML December 1999

12. Full Copyright Statement

 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.
 This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
 others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
 or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
 and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
 kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
 included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
 document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
 the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
 Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
 developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
 copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
 followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
 English.
 The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
 revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
 This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
 "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
 TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
 BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
 HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
 MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

 Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
 Internet Society.

Kunze Informational [Page 23]

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