Fedora Repository Metrics Module

The Fedora Commons repository metrics module: Provides internal repository metrics reporting.

License

License

Categories

Categories

Metrics Application Testing & Monitoring Monitoring
GroupId

GroupId

org.fcrepo
ArtifactId

ArtifactId

fcrepo-metrics
Last Version

Last Version

4.7.5
Release Date

Release Date

Type

Type

bundle
Description

Description

Fedora Repository Metrics Module
The Fedora Commons repository metrics module: Provides internal repository metrics reporting.
Project Organization

Project Organization

DuraSpace, Inc.

Download fcrepo-metrics

Dependencies

compile (5)

Group / Artifact Type Version
io.dropwizard.metrics : metrics-core jar 3.1.2
io.dropwizard.metrics : metrics-graphite jar 3.1.2
io.dropwizard.metrics : metrics-jersey2 jar 3.1.2
io.dropwizard.metrics : metrics-servlets jar 3.1.2
org.springframework : spring-context jar 4.3.3.RELEASE

provided (1)

Group / Artifact Type Version
javax.servlet : javax.servlet-api jar 3.1.0

test (2)

Group / Artifact Type Version
junit : junit jar 4.12
org.mockito : mockito-core jar 1.10.19

Project Modules

There are no modules declared in this project.

PLEASE BE ADVISED

The main branch of Fedora contains the "bleeding edge" of 6.0.0 development. We are currently in a Beta release. While we do not yet recommend it for production, it is ready for commmunity testing and feedback (which we welcome).

Updated: February 19, 2021


Build

JavaDocs | Fedora Wiki | Use cases | Technical Docs | REST API

Fedora is a robust, modular, open source repository system for the management and dissemination of digital content. It is especially suited for digital libraries and archives, both for access and preservation. It is also used to provide specialized access to very large and complex digital collections of historic and cultural materials as well as scientific data. Fedora has a worldwide installed user base that includes academic and cultural heritage organizations, universities, research institutions, university libraries, national libraries, and government agencies. The Fedora community is supported by the stewardship of the Lyrasis organization.

Technical goals:

  • Enhanced preservation sensibilities including preservation storage layer transparency
  • Improved scalability and performance
  • More flexible storage options
  • Improved durability
  • Improved reporting and metrics

Downloads

The current web-deployable version of Fedora can be downloaded from the Lyrasis website or from Github. These artifacts can be deployed directly in a Jetty or Tomcat container as described in the guide to deploying Fedora.

Contributing

Contributions to the Fedora project are always welcome. These may take the form of testing the application, clarifying documentation or writing code.

Code contributions will take the form of pull requests to this repository. They also require a signed contributor license agreement on file before a pull request can be merged. New developers may wish to review this guide as it explains both the process and standards for test coverage, style and documentation.

Getting help

There are two community mailing lists where you can post questions or raise topics for discussion. Everyone is welcome to subscribe and participate.

Many of the developers are available on Slack in the #tech and bledding-edge channels, hosted by fedora-project .slack.com.

In addition, there are weekly Zoom technical calls which anyone may join.

Building and running Fedora from source

System Requirements

  • Java 11
  • Maven 3.6.3
$ git clone https://github.com/fcrepo/fcrepo.git
$ cd fcrepo
$ mvn install

The compiled Fedora war file can be found in ./fcrepo-webapp/target. This can be deployed directly to a servlet container as described in the deployment guide.

If deployed locally using a war file called fcrepo.war, the web application will typically be available at http://localhost:8080/fcrepo/rest.

There are two convenient methods for testing the Fedora application by launching it directly from the command line.

One option is to use the "one click" application, which comes with an embedded Jetty servlet. This can be optionally built by running:

mvn install -pl fcrepo-webapp -P one-click

and can be started by either double-clicking on the jar file or by running the following command:

java -jar ./fcrepo-webapp/target/fcrepo-webapp-<version>-jetty-console.jar

By default, a Fedora home directory, fcrepo, is created in the current directory. You can change the default location by passing in an argument when starting the one-click, e.g.:

java -Dfcrepo.home=/data/fedora-home -jar fcrepo-webapp-<version>-jetty-console.jar

An alternative is use the maven command: mvn jetty:run

$ cd fcrepo-webapp
$ mvn jetty:run

For both of these methods, your Fedora repository will be available at: http://localhost:8080/rest/

Note: You may need to set the $JAVA_HOME property, since Maven uses it to find the Java runtime to use, overriding your PATH. mvn --version will show which version of Java is being used by Maven, e.g.:

Java version: 11.0.2, vendor: Oracle Corporation, runtime: /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/openjdk-11.0.2.jdk/Contents/Home
Default locale: en_US, platform encoding: UTF-8

To set your $JAVA_HOME environment variable:

export JAVA_HOME=/path/to/java
org.fcrepo

Fedora Commons Repository 4

Versions

Version
4.7.5
4.7.4
4.7.3
4.7.2
4.7.1
4.7.0
4.6.2
4.6.1
4.6.0
4.5.1
4.5.0
4.4.0
4.3.0
4.2.0
4.1.1
4.1.0
4.0.0
4.0.0-beta-04
4.0.0-beta-03
4.0.0-beta-02
4.0.0-beta-01
4.0.0-alpha-5
4.0.0-alpha-4
4.0.0-alpha-3
4.0.0-alpha-2
4.0.0-alpha-1