NDSA:Archive Interoperability: Difference between revisions

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===OAIS Description===
===OAIS Description===
An independent archive is assumed to serve only a single Designated Community. The archive and the Designated Community must agree on the design of SIPs, DIPs, and Finding Aids. An independent archive may choose to design these structures based on formal or de- facto standards, which would allow cooperation with other archives that implement the same standards. However, the design decisions to use these standards are not based on the possibility of inter-operation with other archives, but rather on local requirements and cost savings.
An independent archive is assumed to serve only a single Designated Community. The archive and the Designated Community must agree on the design of SIPs, DIPs, and Finding Aids. An independent archive may choose to design these structures based on formal or de- facto standards, which would allow cooperation with other archives that implement the same standards. However, the design decisions to use these standards are not based on the possibility of inter-operation with other archives, but rather on local requirements and cost savings.
The classification of an archive as independent is not based on its size or distributed functionality. An independent archive may occupy one site, or may be physically distributed over many sites. It may use many standards for a given internal element. However, if there is no interaction with other archives, the archive is independent.


==Cooperative Archives (page 6-3, 2009 Pink Book)==
==Cooperative Archives (page 6-3, 2009 Pink Book)==

Latest revision as of 14:18, 11 February 2016

Independent Archives (page 6-2, 2009 Pink Book)

OAIS Description

An independent archive is assumed to serve only a single Designated Community. The archive and the Designated Community must agree on the design of SIPs, DIPs, and Finding Aids. An independent archive may choose to design these structures based on formal or de- facto standards, which would allow cooperation with other archives that implement the same standards. However, the design decisions to use these standards are not based on the possibility of inter-operation with other archives, but rather on local requirements and cost savings.

The classification of an archive as independent is not based on its size or distributed functionality. An independent archive may occupy one site, or may be physically distributed over many sites. It may use many standards for a given internal element. However, if there is no interaction with other archives, the archive is independent.

Cooperative Archives (page 6-3, 2009 Pink Book)

OAIS Description

Cooperating archives are based on standards agreements among two or more archives. The simplest form of cooperation between archives is when one archive acts as a Consumer of material from another archive. In this case the consuming archive must support the DIP format of the producing archive as a SIP format. Cooperating archives have related communities of interest, so they order and ingest data from other cooperating archives and possibly have common data Producers. No common access, submission or dissemination standards are assumed. The only requirement for this architecture is that the cooperating groups support at least one common SIP and DIP format for inter-archive requests. The control mechanism for this sort of inter-operation can be Event Based Order requests at each archive.

Federated Archives (page 6-4, 2009 Pink Book)

OAIS Description

Federated Archives are conceptually Consumer-oriented. In addition to the Local Community (i.e., the original Designated Community served by the archive), there exists a Global community (i.e., an extended Designated Community) which has interests in the holdings of several OAIS archives and has influenced those archives to provide access to their holdings via one or more common finding aids. However, the Local Consumers are likely to have access priority over the global Consumers.

Archives with Shared Functional Areas (page 6-7, 2009 Pink Book)

OAIS Description

In an association involving archives with shared functional areas, Management has entered into agreements with archives to share or integrate functional areas. The motive for this may be to share expensive resources such as hierarchical file management system for Archival Storage, peripheral device for Ingest or dissemination of Information Packages or supercomputers for complicated transformations between SIPs, AIPs or DIPs. This association is fundamentally different from the previous examples, in that it is no longer possible to ignore the internal architecture of the archive.


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