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Published byAmy Burke Modified over 6 years ago
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WORKSHOP ON INFORMATION SYSTEMS ARCHITECTURES Information / software architectures based on Content Management Systems (CMS): some examples with Drupal IAALD 2010 side-event SupAgro, Montpellier, France 26 April 2010 Valeria Pesce (GFAR)
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CMS + external sources + commodity services
AgriFeeds ( Information architecture: individual sources “commodity services” Software architecture: CMS to harvest, store and manage content CMS + custom code for advanced filtering and custom feeds “Commodity services”: feed generators like Feedburner, Google API for calendars, widgets exploiting the APIs of various popular RSS readers - search/display - sources Processing commodity services
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AgriFeeds architecture
CMS news events Organization website harvesting metadata filtering news events Regional network website AGGREGATED VIEW FeedBurner Commodity services
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Example: Upcoming Forestry Events
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Item level: semantics come from the sources
Future versions: automatic indexing with controlled vocabularies
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Feed level: semantics come from the system
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Advantages Information architecture: Relevant contents are stored and indexed without human intervention Metadata standards are exploited Software architecture: No need to write code from scratch No need to maintain code: relies on an active community of developers Complies with good practices in IM: re-use, re-usability, re-packaging, use of standards
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Challenges Information architecture: Software architecture:
Depends (partially: the basic functionalities rely on the CMS) on the functioning and continued availability of the commodity services Quality depends on the quality of the sources Software architecture: Relies on the continued maintenance of the CMS The custom code needed to extend the basic CMS functionalities needs to be maintained 1st version: 30% custom code 2nd version: 15% custom code NEXT VERSION: >> 1% CUSTOM CODE
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CMS as integrated solution
AgriDrupal ( Information architecture: - external sources - locally managed contents Software architecture: - search/display - exports Coherent management metadata Model / content model CMS to manage any kind of information using any metadata set CMS to interface web services, APIs, RDF, XML… CMS as an “information management tool” CMS as an “information hub” CMS as a pool of specialized solutions
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CMS for specialized functions
Through an extended use of metadata and workflows, a CMS can perform the functions of specialized software. Example of document repository management in Drupal
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Advantages Information architecture: Both external and local contents managed through metadata models and content models flexibility and adaptability to standards Software architecture: No need to write code from scratch No need to maintain code: relies on an active community of developers One tool to manage everything
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Challenges Information architecture: Software architecture:
Depends (partially) on the availability of good sources Common vocabularies are needed Software architecture: Relies on the continued maintenance of the CMS Functionalities limited to the functionalities of the CMS The custom code needed to extend the CMS functionalities needs to be maintained Specialized functions will not be as specialized as in specialized software
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