mirror of
https://github.com/alanorth/cgspace-notes.git
synced 2024-11-16 20:07:03 +01:00
26 KiB
26 KiB
title | date | author | categories | |
---|---|---|---|---|
July, 2022 | 2022-07-02T14:07:36+03:00 | Alan Orth |
|
2022-07-02
- I learned how to use the Levenshtein functions in PostgreSQL
- The thing is that there is a limit of 255 characters for these functions in PostgreSQL so you need to truncate the strings before comparing
- Also, the trgm functions I've used before are case insensitive, but Levenshtein is not, so you need to make sure to lower case both strings first
- A working query checking for duplicates in the recent AfricaRice items is:
localhost/dspace= ☘ SELECT text_value FROM metadatavalue WHERE dspace_object_id IN (SELECT uuid FROM item) AND metadata_field_id=64 AND levenshtein_less_equal(LOWER('International Trade and Exotic Pests: The Risks for Biodiversity and African Economies'), LEFT(LOWER(text_value), 255), 3) <= 3;
text_value
────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
International trade and exotic pests: the risks for biodiversity and African economies
(1 row)
Time: 399.751 ms
- There is a great blog post discussing Soundex with Levenshtein and creating indexes to make them faster
- I want to do some proper checks of accuracy and speed against my trigram method
2022-07-03
- Start a harvest on AReS
2022-07-04
- Linode told me that CGSpace had high load yesterday
- I also got some up and down notices from UptimeRobot
- Looking now, I see there was a very high CPU and database pool load, but a mostly normal DSpace session count
- Seems we have some old database transactions since 2022-06-27:
- Looking at the top connections to nginx yesterday:
# awk '{print $1}' /var/log/nginx/{access,library-access,oai,rest}.log.1 | sort | uniq -c | sort -h | tail
1132 64.124.8.34
1146 2a01:4f8:1c17:5550::1
1380 137.184.159.211
1533 64.124.8.59
4013 80.248.237.167
4776 54.195.118.125
10482 45.5.186.2
11177 172.104.229.92
15855 2a01:7e00::f03c:91ff:fe9a:3a37
22179 64.39.98.251
- And the total number of unique IPs:
# awk '{print $1}' /var/log/nginx/{access,library-access,oai,rest}.log.1 | sort -u | wc -l
6952
- This seems low, so it must have been from the request patterns by certain visitors
- 64.39.98.251 is Qualys, and I'm debating blocking all their IPs using a geo block in nginx (need to test)
- The top few are known ILRI and other CGIAR scrapers, but 80.248.237.167 is on InternetVikings in Sweden, using a normal user agentand scraping Discover
- 64.124.8.59 is making requests with a normal user agent and belongs to Castle Global or Zayo
- I ran all system updates and rebooted the server (could have just restarted PostgreSQL but I thought I might as well do everything)
- I implemented a geo mapping for the user agent mapping AND the nginx
limit_req_zone
by extracting the networks into an external file and including it in two different geo mapping blocks- This is clever and relies on the fact that we can use defaults in both cases
- First, we map the user agent of requests from these networks to "bot" so that Tomcat and Solr handle them accordingly
- Second, we use this as a key in a
limit_req_zone
, which relies on a default mapping of '' (and nginx doesn't evaluate empty cache keys)
- I noticed that CIP uploaded a number of Georgian presentations with
dcterms.language
set to English and Other so I changed them to "ka"- Perhaps we need to update our list of languages to include all instead of the most common ones
- I wrote a script
ilri/iso-639-value-pairs.py
to extract the names and Alpha 2 codes for all ISO 639-1 languages from pycountry and added them toinput-forms.xml
2022-07-06
- CGSpace went down and up a few times due to high load
- I found one host in Romania making very high speed requests with a normal user agent (
Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 6.2; WOW64; Trident/7.0; .NET4.0E; .NET4.0C
):
- I found one host in Romania making very high speed requests with a normal user agent (
# awk '{print $1}' /var/log/nginx/{access,library-access,oai,rest}.log | sort | uniq -c | sort -h | tail -n 10
516 142.132.248.90
525 157.55.39.234
587 66.249.66.21
593 95.108.213.59
1372 137.184.159.211
4776 54.195.118.125
5441 205.186.128.185
6267 45.5.186.2
15839 2a01:7e00::f03c:91ff:fe9a:3a37
36114 146.19.75.141
- I added 146.19.75.141 to the list of bot networks in nginx
- While looking at the logs I started thinking about Bing again
- They apparently publish a list of all their networks
- I wrote a script to use
prips
to print the IPs for each network - The script is
bing-networks-to-ips.sh
- From Bing's IPs alone I purged 145,403 hits... sheesh
- Delete two items on CGSpace for Margarita because she was getting the "Authorization denied for action OBSOLETE (DELETE) on BITSTREAM:0b26875a-..." error
- This is the same DSpace 6 bug I noticed in 2021-03, 2021-04, and 2021-05
- Update some
cg.audience
metadata to use "Academics" instead of "Academicians":
dspace=# UPDATE metadatavalue SET text_value='Academics' WHERE dspace_object_id IN (SELECT uuid FROM item) AND metadata_field_id=144 AND text_value='Academicians';
UPDATE 104
- I will also have to remove "Academicians" from input-forms.xml
2022-07-07
- Finalize lists of non-AGROVOC subjects in CGSpace that I started last week
- I used the SQL helper functions to find the collections where each term was used:
localhost/dspace= ☘ SELECT DISTINCT(ds6_item2collectionhandle(dspace_object_id)) AS collection, COUNT(*) FROM metadatavalue WHERE dspace_object_id IN (SELECT uuid FROM item) AND LOWER(text_value) = 'water demand' GROUP BY collection ORDER BY count DESC LIMIT 5;
collection │ count
─────────────┼───────
10568/36178 │ 56
10568/36185 │ 46
10568/36181 │ 35
10568/36188 │ 28
10568/36179 │ 21
(5 rows)
- For now I only did terms from my list that had 100 or more occurrences in CGSpace
- This leaves us with thirty-six terms that I will send to Sara Jani and Elizabeth Arnaud for evaluating possible inclusion to AGROVOC
- Write to some submitters from CIAT, Bioversity, and CCAFS to ask if they are still uploading new items with their legacy subject fields on CGSpace
- We want to remove them from the submission form to create space for new fields
- Update one term I noticed people using that was close to AGROVOC:
dspace=# UPDATE metadatavalue SET text_value='development policies' WHERE dspace_object_id IN (SELECT uuid FROM item) AND metadata_field_id=187 AND text_value='development policy';
UPDATE 108
- After contacting some editors I removed some old metadata fields from the submission form and browse indexes:
- Bioversity subject (
cg.subject.bioversity
) - CCAFS phase 1 project tag (
cg.identifier.ccafsproject
) - CIAT project tag (
cg.identifier.ciatproject
) - CIAT subject (
cg.subject.ciat
)
- Bioversity subject (
- Work on cleaning and proofing forty-six AfricaRice items for CGSpace
- Last week we identified some duplicates so I removed those
- The data is of mediocre quality
- I've been fixing citations (nitpick), adding licenses, adding volume/issue/extent, fixing DOIs, and adding some AGROVOC subjects
- I even found titles that have typos, looking something like OCR errors...
2022-07-08
- Finalize the cleaning and proofing of AfricaRice records
- I found two suspicious items that claim to have been published but I can't find in the respective journals, so I removed those
- I uploaded the forty-four items to DSpace Test
- Margarita from CCAFS said they are no longer using the CCAFS subject or CCAFS phase 2 project tag
- I removed these from the input-form.xml and Discovery facets:
- cg.identifier.ccafsprojectpii
- cg.subject.cifor
- For now we will keep them in the search filters
- I removed these from the input-form.xml and Discovery facets:
- I modified my
check-duplicates.py
script a bit to fix a logic error for deleted items and add similarity scores from spacy (see: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8897593/how-to-compute-the-similarity-between-two-text-documents)- I want to use this with the MARLO innovation reports, to find related publications and working papers on CGSpace
- I am curious to see how the similarity scores compare to those from trgm... perhaps we don't need them actually
- Deploy latest changes to submission form, Discovery, and browse on CGSpace
- Also run all system updates and reboot the host
- Fix 152
dcterms.relation
that are using "cgspace.cgiar.org" links instead of handles:
UPDATE metadatavalue SET text_value = REGEXP_REPLACE(text_value, '.*cgspace\.cgiar\.org/handle/(\d+/\d+)$', 'https://hdl.handle.net/\1') WHERE dspace_object_id IN (SELECT uuid FROM item) AND metadata_field_id=180 AND text_value ~ 'cgspace\.cgiar\.org/handle/\d+/\d+$';
2022-07-10
- UptimeRobot says that CGSpace is down
- I see high load around 22, high CPU around 800%
- Doesn't seem to be a lot of unique IPs:
# awk '{print $1}' /var/log/nginx/{access,library-access,oai,rest}.log | sort -u | wc -l
2243
Looking at the top twenty I see some usual IPs, but some new ones on Hetzner that are using many DSpace sessions:
$ grep 65.109.2.97 dspace.log.2022-07-10 | grep -oE 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}:ip_addr=' | sort | uniq | wc -l
1613
$ grep 95.216.174.97 dspace.log.2022-07-10 | grep -oE 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}:ip_addr=' | sort | uniq | wc -l
1696
$ grep 65.109.15.213 dspace.log.2022-07-10 | grep -oE 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}:ip_addr=' | sort | uniq | wc -l
1708
$ grep 65.108.80.78 dspace.log.2022-07-10 | grep -oE 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}:ip_addr=' | sort | uniq | wc -l
1830
$ grep 65.108.95.23 dspace.log.2022-07-10 | grep -oE 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}:ip_addr=' | sort | uniq | wc -l
1811
-
These IPs are using normal-looking user agents:
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:52.9) Gecko/20100101 Goanna/4.1 Firefox/52.9 PaleMoon/28.0.0.1
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64; rv:40.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/45.0"
Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.9; rv:56.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/56.0.1 Waterfox/56.0.1
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/71.0.3578.85 Safari/537.36
-
I will add networks I'm seeing now to nginx's bot-networks.conf for now (not all of Hetzner) and purge the hits later:
- 65.108.0.0/16
- 65.21.0.0/16
- 95.216.0.0/16
- 135.181.0.0/16
- 138.201.0.0/16
-
I think I'm going to get to a point where I categorize all commercial subnets as bots by default and then whitelist those we need
-
Sheesh, there are a bunch more IPv6 addresses also on Hetzner:
# awk '{print $1}' /var/log/nginx/{access,library-access}.log | sort | grep 2a01:4f9 | uniq -c | sort -h
1 2a01:4f9:6a:1c2b::2
2 2a01:4f9:2b:5a8::2
2 2a01:4f9:4b:4495::2
96 2a01:4f9:c010:518c::1
137 2a01:4f9:c010:a9bc::1
142 2a01:4f9:c010:58c9::1
142 2a01:4f9:c010:58ea::1
144 2a01:4f9:c010:58eb::1
145 2a01:4f9:c010:6ff8::1
148 2a01:4f9:c010:5190::1
149 2a01:4f9:c010:7d6d::1
153 2a01:4f9:c010:5226::1
156 2a01:4f9:c010:7f74::1
160 2a01:4f9:c010:5188::1
161 2a01:4f9:c010:58e5::1
168 2a01:4f9:c010:58ed::1
170 2a01:4f9:c010:548e::1
170 2a01:4f9:c010:8c97::1
175 2a01:4f9:c010:58c8::1
175 2a01:4f9:c010:aada::1
182 2a01:4f9:c010:58ec::1
182 2a01:4f9:c010:ae8c::1
502 2a01:4f9:c010:ee57::1
530 2a01:4f9:c011:567a::1
535 2a01:4f9:c010:d04e::1
539 2a01:4f9:c010:3d9a::1
586 2a01:4f9:c010:93db::1
593 2a01:4f9:c010:a04a::1
601 2a01:4f9:c011:4166::1
607 2a01:4f9:c010:9881::1
640 2a01:4f9:c010:87fb::1
648 2a01:4f9:c010:e680::1
1141 2a01:4f9:3a:2696::2
1146 2a01:4f9:3a:2555::2
3207 2a01:4f9:3a:2c19::2
- Maybe it's time I ban all of Hetzner... sheesh.
- I left for a few hours and the server was going up and down the whole time, still very high CPU and database when I got back
- I am not sure what's going on
- I extracted all the IPs and used
resolve-addresses-geoip2.py
to analyze them and extract all the Hetzner networks and block them - It's 181 IPs on Hetzner...
- I extracted all the IPs and used
- I rebooted the server to see if it was just some stuck locks in PostgreSQL...
- The load is still higher than I would expect, and after a few more hours I see more Hetzner IPs coming through? Two more subnets to block
- Start a harvest on AReS
2022-07-12
- Update an incorrect ORCID identifier for Alliance
- Adjust collection permissions on CIFOR publications collection so Vika can submit without approval
2022-07-14
- Someone on the DSpace Slack mentioned having issues with the database configuration in DSpace 7.3
- The reason is apparently that the default
db.dialect
changed from "org.dspace.storage.rdbms.hibernate.postgres.DSpacePostgreSQL82Dialect" to "org.hibernate.dialect.PostgreSQL94Dialect" as a result of a Hibernate update
- The reason is apparently that the default
- Then I was getting more errors starting the backend server in Tomcat, but the issue was that the backend server needs Solr to be up first!
2022-07-17
- Start a harvest on AReS around 3:30PM
- Later in the evening I see CGSpace was going down and up (not as bad as last Sunday) with around 18.0 load...
- I see very high CPU usage:
- But DSpace sessions are normal (not like last weekend):
- I see some Hetzner IPs in the top users today, but most of the requests are getting HTTP 503 because of the changes I made last week
- I see 137.184.159.211, which is on Digital Ocean, and the DNS is apparently iitawpsite.iita.org
- I've seen their user agent before, but I don't think I knew it was IITA: "GuzzleHttp/6.3.3 curl/7.84.0 PHP/7.4.30"
- I already have something in nginx to mark Guzzle as a bot, but interestingly it shows up in Solr as
$http_user_agent
so there is a logic error in my nginx config
- Ouch, the logic error seems to be this:
geo $ua {
default $http_user_agent;
include /etc/nginx/bot-networks.conf;
}
- After some testing on DSpace Test I see that this is actually setting the default user agent to a literal
$http_user_agent
- The nginx map docs say:
The resulting value can contain text, variable (0.9.0), and their combination (1.11.0).
- But I can't get it to work, neither for the default value or for matching my IP...
- I will have to ask on the nginx mailing list
- The total number of requests and unique hosts was not even very high (below here around midnight so is almost all day):
# awk '{print $1}' /var/log/nginx/{access,library-access,oai,rest}.log | sort -u | wc -l
2776
# awk '{print $1}' /var/log/nginx/{access,library-access,oai,rest}.log | wc -l
40325
2022-07-18
- Reading more about nginx's geo/map and doing some tests on DSpace Test, it appears that the geo module cannot do dynamic values
- So this issue with the literal
$http_user_agent
is due to the geo block I put in place earlier this month - I reworked the logic so that the geo block sets "bot" or and empty string when a network matches or not, and then re-use that value in a mapping that passes through the host's user agent in case geo has set it to an empty string
- This allows me to accomplish the original goal while still only using one bot-networks.conf file for the
limit_req_zone
and the user agent mapping that we pass to Tomcat - Unfortunately this means I will have hundreds of thousands of requests in Solr with a literal
$http_user_agent
- I might try to purge some by enumerating all the networks in my block file and running them through
check-spider-ip-hits.sh
- So this issue with the literal
- I extracted all the IPs/subnets from
bot-networks.conf
and prepared them so I could enumerate their IPs- I had to add
/32
to all single IPs, which I did with this crazy vim invocation:
- I had to add
:g!/\/\d\+$/s/^\(\d\+\.\d\+\.\d\+\.\d\+\)$/\1\/32/
- Explanation:
g!
: global, lines not matching (the opposite ofg
)/\/\d\+$/
, pattern matching/
with one or more digits at the end of the lines/^\(\d\+\.\d\+\.\d\+\.\d\+\)$/\1\/32/
, for lines not matching above, capture the IPv4 address and add/32
at the end
- Then I ran the list through prips to enumerate the IPs:
$ while read -r line; do prips "$line" | sed -e '1d; $d'; done < /tmp/bot-networks.conf > /tmp/bot-ips.txt
$ wc -l /tmp/bot-ips.txt
1946968 /tmp/bot-ips.txt
- I started running
check-spider-ip-hits.sh
with the 1946968 IPs and left it running in dry run mode
2022-07-19
- Patrizio and Fabio emailed me to ask if their IP was banned from CGSpace
- It's one of the Hetzner ones so I said yes definitely, and asked more about how they are using the API
- Add ORCID identifer for Ram Dhulipala, Lilian Wambua, and Dan Masiga to CGSpace and tag them and some other existing items:
dc.contributor.author,cg.creator.identifier
"Dhulipala, Ram K","Ram Dhulipala: 0000-0002-9720-3247"
"Dhulipala, Ram","Ram Dhulipala: 0000-0002-9720-3247"
"Dhulipala, R.","Ram Dhulipala: 0000-0002-9720-3247"
"Wambua, Lillian","Lillian Wambua: 0000-0003-3632-7411"
"Wambua, Lilian","Lillian Wambua: 0000-0003-3632-7411"
"Masiga, D.K.","Daniel Masiga: 0000-0001-7513-0887"
"Masiga, Daniel K.","Daniel Masiga: 0000-0001-7513-0887"
"Jores, Joerg","Joerg Jores: 0000-0003-3790-5746"
"Schieck, Elise","Elise Schieck: 0000-0003-1756-6337"
"Schieck, Elise G.","Elise Schieck: 0000-0003-1756-6337"
$ ./ilri/add-orcid-identifiers-csv.py -i /tmp/2022-07-19-add-orcids.csv -db dspace -u dspace -p 'fuuu'
- Review the AfricaRice records from earlier this month again
- I found one more duplicate and one more suspicious item, so the total after removing those is now forty-two
- I took all the ~560 IPs that had hits so far in
check-spider-ip-hits.sh
above (about 270,000 into the list of 1946968 above) and ran them directly on CGSpace- This purged 199,032 hits from Solr, very many of which were from Qualys, but also that Chinese bot on 124.17.34.0/24 that was grabbing PDFs a few years ago which I blocked in nginx, but never purged the hits from
- Then I deleted all IPs up to the last one where I found hits in the large file of 1946968 IPs and re-started the script
2022-07-20
- Did a few more minor edits to the forty-two AfricaRice records (including generating thumbnails for the handful that are Creative Commons licensed) then did a test import on my local instance
- Once it worked well I did an import to CGSpace:
$ dspace import -a -e fuuu@example.com -m 2022-07-20-africarice.map -s /tmp/SimpleArchiveFormat
- Also make edits to ~62 affiliations on CGSpace because I noticed they were messed up
- Extract another ~1,600 IPs that had hits since I started the second round of
check-spider-ip-hits.sh
yesterday and purge another 303,594 hits- This is about 999846 into the original list of 1946968 from yesterday
- A metric fuck ton of the IPs in this batch were from Hetzner
2022-07-21
- Extract another ~2,100 IPs that had hits since I started the third round of
check-spider-ip-hits.sh
last night and purge another 763,843 hits- This is about 1441221 into the original list of 1946968 from two days ago
- Again these are overwhelmingly Hetzner (not surprising since my bot-networks.conf file in nginx is mostly Hetzner)
- I responded to my original request to Atmire about the log4j to reload4j migration in DSpace 6.4
- I had initially requested a comment from them in 2022-05
- Extract another ~1,200 IPs that had hits from the fourth round of
check-spider-ip-hits.sh
earlier today and purge another 74,591 hits- Now the list of IPs I enumerated from the nginx
bot-networks.conf
is finished
- Now the list of IPs I enumerated from the nginx
2022-07-22
- I created a new Linode instance for testing DSpace 7
- Jose from the CCAFS team sent me the final versions of 3,500+ Innovations, Policies, MELIAs, and OICRs from MARLO
- I re-synced CGSpace with DSpace Test so I can have a newer snapshot of the production data there for testing the CCAFS MELIAs, OICRs, Policies, and Innovations
- I re-created the tip-submit and tip-approve DSpace user accounts for Alliance's new TIP submit tool and added them to the Alliance submitters and Alliance admins accounts respectively
- Start working on updating the Ansible infrastructure playbooks for DSpace 7 stuff
2022-07-23
- Start a harvest on AReS
- More work on DSpace 7 related issues in the Ansible infrastructure playbooks
2022-07-24
- More work on DSpace 7 related issues in the Ansible infrastructure playbooks
2022-07-25
- More work on DSpace 7 related issues in the Ansible infrastructure playbooks
- I see that, for Solr, we will need to copy the DSpace configsets to the writable data directory rather than the default home dir
- The Taking Solr to production guide recommends keeping the unzipped code separate from the data, which we do in our Solr role already
- So that means we keep the unzipped code in
/opt/solr-8.11.2
, but the data directory in/var/solr/data
, with the DSpace Solr cores here/var/solr/data/configsets
- I'm not sure how to integrate that into my playbooks yet
- Much to my surprise, Discovery indexing on DSpace 7 was really fast when I did it just now, apparently taking 40 minutes of wall clock time?!:
$ /usr/bin/time -v /home/dspace7/bin/dspace index-discovery -b
The script has started
(Re)building index from scratch.
Done with indexing
The script has completed
Command being timed: "/home/dspace7/bin/dspace index-discovery -b"
User time (seconds): 588.18
System time (seconds): 91.26
Percent of CPU this job got: 28%
Elapsed (wall clock) time (h:mm:ss or m:ss): 40:05.79
Average shared text size (kbytes): 0
Average unshared data size (kbytes): 0
Average stack size (kbytes): 0
Average total size (kbytes): 0
Maximum resident set size (kbytes): 635380
Average resident set size (kbytes): 0
Major (requiring I/O) page faults: 1513
Minor (reclaiming a frame) page faults: 216412
Voluntary context switches: 1671092
Involuntary context switches: 744007
Swaps: 0
File system inputs: 4396880
File system outputs: 74312
Socket messages sent: 0
Socket messages received: 0
Signals delivered: 0
Page size (bytes): 4096
Exit status: 0
- Leroy from the Alliance wrote to say that the CIAT Library is back up so I might be able to download all the PDFs
- It had been shut down for a security reason a few months ago and we were planning to download them all and attach them to their relevant items on CGSpace
- I noticed one item that had the PDF already on CGSpace so I'll need to consider that when I eventually do the import
- I had to re-create the tip-submit and tip-approve accounts for Alliance on DSpace Test again
- After I created them last week they somehow got deleted...?!... I couldn't find them or the mel-submit account either!
2022-07-26
- Rafael from Alliance wrote to say that the tip-submit account wasn't working on DSpace Test
- I think I need to have the submit account in the Alliance admin group in order for it to be able to submit via the REST API, but yesterday I had added it to the submitters group
- Meeting with Peter and Abenet about CGSpace issues
- We want to do a training with IFPRI ASAP
- Then we want to start bringing the comms people from the Initiatives in
- We also want to revive the Metadata Working Group to have discussions about metadata standards, governance, etc
- We walked through DSpace 7.3 to get an idea of what vanilla looks like and start thinking about UI, item display, etc (perhaps we solicit help from some CG centers on Angular?)
- Start looking at the metadata for the 1,637 Innovations that Jose sent last week
- There are still issues with the citation formatting, but I will just fix it instead of asking him again
- I can use these GREL to fix the spacing around "Annual Report2017" and the periods:
value.replace(/Annual Report(\d{4})/, "Annual Report $1")
value.replace(/ \./, ".")
- Then there are also some other issues with the metadata that I sent to him for comments
- I managed to get DSpace 7 running behind nginx, and figured out how to change the logo to CGIAR and run a local instance using the remote API
2022-07-27
- Work on the MARLO Innovations and MELIA
- I had to ask Jose for some clarifications and correct some encoding issues (for example in Côte d'Ivoire all over the place, and weird periods everywhere)
- Work on the DSpace 7.3 theme, mimicking CGSpace's DSpace 6 them pretty well for now
2022-07-28
- Work on the MARLO Innovations
- I had to ask Jose more questions about character encoding and duplicates
- I added a new feature to csv-metadata-quality to add missing regions to the region column when it is detected that there is a country with missing regions
2022-07-30
- Start a full harvest on AReS