AGROVOC validation is now disabled by default, but can be enabled
on a field-by-field basis. For example, countries and regions are
also present in AGROVOC. Fields with these values can be enabled
using the new `--agrovoc-fields` option.
I reworked the script output to show the field name when printing
an invalid term so that the user knows in which field the term is.
This was tricky because of the nature of newlines. In actuality we
are removing Unix line feeds here (U+000A) because Windows carriage
returns are actually already removed by the string stripping in the
whitespace fix.
Creating the test case in Vim was difficult because I couldn't fig-
ure out how to manually enter a line feed character. In the end I
used a search and replace on a known pattern like "ALAN", replacing
it with \r. Neither entering the Unicode code point (U+000A) direc-
tly or typing an "Enter" character after ^V worked. Grrr.
The latter is a fork that hasn't been updated since 2016 and the
original still seems to be well maintained, with recent database
updates as well as tests for Python 3.7.
Also, pycountry supports ISO 3166-2 (administrative zones), which
we could eventually use for sub regions.
We actually only need to see if there are more than zero matches
because a term like "Nigeria" will match in English, Spanish, etc,
whereas terms that *really* don't match will have zero results.
Will validate against ISO 639-2 or ISO 639-3 depending on how long
the language field is. Otherwise will return that the language is
invalid.
Does not currently have any support for generic values like "Other".
These standalone characters often indicate issues with encoding or
copy/paste in languages with accents like French and Spanish. For
example: foreˆt should be forêt.
It is not possible to fix these issues automatically, but this will
print a warning so you can notify the owner of the data.
These are things like non-breaking spaces, "replacement" characters,
etc that add nothing to the metadata and often cause errors during
parsing or displaying in a UI.
In this case it fixes occurences of invalid multi-value separators.
DSpace uses "||" to separate multiple values in one field, but our
editors sometimes give us files with mistakes like "|". We can fix
these to be correct multi-value separators if we are sure that the
metadata is not actually using "|" for some legitimate purpose.
Currently only supports specifying input and output files with -i
and -o. Eventually I'll add more options like dry run, debug, and
maybe things like forcing unsafe fixes.
Check for a column that has "issn" or "isbn" in the name rather
than by its explicit name, as the column is dc.identifier.issn now,
but will be cg.issn in the future if CG Core v2 happens.
I'm only concerned with validating issue dates here. In DSpace they
are generally always YYYY, YYY-MM, or YYYY-MM-DD (though in theory
they could be any valid ISO8601 format).
This also checks for cases where the date is missing and where the
metadata has specified multiple dates like "1990||1991", as this is
valid, but there is no practical value for it in our system.