/medieval-mss

Medieval Manuscripts in Oxford Libraries: TEI catalogue descriptions

Primary LanguageHTML

Bodleian Libraries Catalogue of Western Manuscripts

This repository contains the TEI data that represents the Bodleian Library's Catalogue of Medieval Manuscripts.

It also contains several scripts and tools for processing this data into a Solr instance for use with our Blacklight search service.

Indexing the Catalogue

NB: This information is probably only useful if you're working in the Bodleian!

This project ships with a version of the Saxon XML processor. The only dependency needed to run this is a working Java installation. Inside the processing folder you will find two shell scripts and several xQuery and XSLT files.

The generate-html.sh script will generate an HTML representation of the TEI data, for displaying the record in the front-end catalogue.

The generate-solr-document.sh script will create a Solr XML document, which can then be passed along to a running Solr instance. The arguments for this command are:

$> ./generate-solr-document.sh [xQuery File] [Solr XML Output filename] [Solr record type] [Solr server]

To index the manuscripts, you should first create a html folder inside of the processing folder, then run:

$> ./generate-html.sh
$> ./generate-solr-document.sh manuscripts.xquery mss_solr_index.xml manuscript [Some Solr Server]

For the Solr record type you should use manuscript for manuscripts, person for people, place for places, and work for works.

Indexing in Windows 7

The indexing scripts require curl, tidy alias HTML tidy and xmllint. These tools will need to be installed on your local machine, if you do not already have them. curl is included with posh-git (see below).

The scripts require a terminal running BASH. If you have GitHub Desktop installed on your machine, this should include Git Shell alias posh-git, which is a package for Windows PowerShell that will allow you to execute BASH shell scripts.

Modifying the HTML output

The HTML representations of each record is generated by the convert2HTML.xsl script. Modifying this and running the generate-html.sh script will generate new HTML, which will then be picked up by the Solr indexing process and incorporated into the Solr index for record display.