Building the BibClass Index

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You will need to identify a directory or directories where you plan to store your SGML or XML source file, your index file (approximately 75% of the size of your bibliographic information), your "region" files, and other information such as data dictionaries. We recommend you use the following structure:
You will need to identify a directory or directories where you plan to store your SGML or XML source file, your index file (approximately 75% of the size of your bibliographic information), your "region" files, and other information such as data dictionaries. We recommend you use the following structure:
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* Store SGML or XML files in <tt>/{DLXSROOT}/obj/{s}/{sample}/</tt> where <tt>{DLXSROOT}</tt> is the "tree" where you install all DLXS components, <tt>{s}</tt> is the first letter of the name of the collection you are indexing, and <tt>{sample}</tt> is the collection ID of the collection you are indexing. For example, if your collection id is "nyt" and your DLXSROOT is "/l1", you will place the <tt>nyt.xml</tt> file in <tt>/l1/obj/n/nyt/</tt>, e.g., <tt>/l1/obj/n/nyt/nyt.xml</tt>. See [[Directory Conventions: Complete Version]] for more information.
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* Store SGML or XML files in <tt>{DLXSROOT}/obj/{s}/{sample}/</tt> where <tt>{DLXSROOT}</tt> is the "tree" where you install all DLXS components, <tt>{s}</tt> is the first letter of the name of the collection you are indexing, and <tt>{sample}</tt> is the collection ID of the collection you are indexing. For example, if your collection id is "nyt" and your DLXSROOT is "/l1", you will place the <tt>nyt.xml</tt> file in <tt>/l1/obj/n/nyt/</tt>, e.g., <tt>/l1/obj/n/nyt/nyt.xml</tt>. See [[Directory Conventions: Complete Version]] for more information.
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* Store index, region, data dictionary, and init files in <tt>/{DLXSROOT}/idx/{s}/{sample}/</tt>, e.g., <tt>/l1/idx/n/nyt/nyt.idx</tt>. See the [[Working with XPAT|XPAT documentation]] for more on these types of files.
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* Store index, region, data dictionary, and init files in <tt>{DLXSROOT}/idx/{s}/{sample}/</tt>, e.g., <tt>/l1/idx/n/nyt/nyt.idx</tt>. See the [[Working with XPAT|XPAT documentation]] for more on these types of files.
==Indexing the Data==
==Indexing the Data==

Current revision

Main Page > Mounting Collections: Class-specific Steps > Mounting a Bib Class Collection > Building the BibClass Index

Contents


[edit] Setting Up Directories

You will need to identify a directory or directories where you plan to store your SGML or XML source file, your index file (approximately 75% of the size of your bibliographic information), your "region" files, and other information such as data dictionaries. We recommend you use the following structure:

  • Store SGML or XML files in {DLXSROOT}/obj/{s}/{sample}/ where {DLXSROOT} is the "tree" where you install all DLXS components, {s} is the first letter of the name of the collection you are indexing, and {sample} is the collection ID of the collection you are indexing. For example, if your collection id is "nyt" and your DLXSROOT is "/l1", you will place the nyt.xml file in /l1/obj/n/nyt/, e.g., /l1/obj/n/nyt/nyt.xml. See Directory Conventions: Complete Version for more information.
  • Store index, region, data dictionary, and init files in {DLXSROOT}/idx/{s}/{sample}/, e.g., /l1/idx/n/nyt/nyt.idx. See the XPAT documentation for more on these types of files.

[edit] Indexing the Data

The instructions below assume a sample collection named "nyt" and a DLXSROOT of "/l1", as in the above examples. Please replace these sample names with your local filenames.

  1. Ensure that your SGML is fully validated or normalized, or that your XML is fully validated. Use a validating parser such as nsgmls to accomplish this. NB: Building indexes without validation can cause problems such as unreliable results; data that will not validate should not be put online.
  2. Ensure that your data is Unicode (see [../unicode.html DLXS Unicode Data Preparation and Online Presentation Issues]).
  3. Assuming XML, put the file nyt.xml in /l1/obj/n/nyt/nyt.xml
  4. Copy the sample data dictionary file (bib-sample.dd) to /l1/idx/n/nyt/ and rename as nyt.dd
  5. Edit the nyt.dd file to replace
    1. b/bib-sample/bib-sample.xml with n/nyt/nyt.xml
    2. b/bib-sample/bib-sample.idx with n/nyt/nyt.idx
    3. and b/bib-sample/bib-sample.init with n/nyt/nyt.init
  6. Copy the sample init file (bib-sample.init) to /l1/idx/n/nyt/ and rename as nyt.init
  7. Index your collection using the following command, replacing the value 10m with an appropriate amount of memory. Please see [../../xpat/index.html XPAT documentation] to determine how much memory to allocate.
    xpatbldu -m 10m -D /l1/idx/n/nyt/nyt.dd
  8. Create your region files by issuing the following command.
    multirgn -f -D /l1/idx/n/nyt.dd -t bib-regions.tags
    The file bib-regions.tags can be located in any directory and can be deleted after the regions have been indexed. DLPS keeps a copy of this file in /l1/obj/lib/sgml/bib-regions.tags

[edit] Testing the Index

You have now built indexes and region files for your collection. You can test that things are properly indexed by issuing the command
xpatu /l1/idx/n/nyt/nyt.dd
and then searching a common word (e.g., "the") and

    region A

Strategically, it is good to test this from a directory other than the one you indexed in, to ensure that relative or absolute paths are resolving appropriately.

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