Importer Manual / Version 2310
Table Of ContentsCoreMedia CMS does not run without specifying content types and their fields (see the Content Server Manual), for example
<XmlGrammar Name="coremedia-richtext-1.0" Root="div" SystemId="lib/xml/coremedia-richtext-1.0.dtd"/> <DocType Name="Text"> <StringProperty Name="Headline" Length="200"/> <XmlProperty Name="Text" Grammar="coremedia-richtext-1.0"/> <IntProperty Name="Priority"/> <StringProperty Name="Source" Length="20"/> <DateProperty Name="AutoDeletedate"/> <DateProperty Name="AutoPdate"/> <LinkListProperty Name="Image" LinkType="Image"/> </DocType>
Example 4.3. Content type
If the property import.enforceCompleteVersion
in the configuration file of the
importer is set to "true" (default), then the values for all fields must be provided for an
import of a document of this type. For each document property
(StringProperty
,
XmlProperty
, ...), there must be a corresponding XML
element (string
,
text
, ...). If one declared field is missing an error
message is generated, and if there are two values for one field, the first is overwritten by
the last.
If the property import.enforceCompleteVersion
in the configuration file of the
importer is set to "false", it is not necessary to provide all elements. See the
Administrator Manual for a description of the property.
Before the format of each field element is described in detail, the following example shows a typical document of the above content type:
<document name="MyDocument" id="1" type="Text" path="/News/Financial/"> <version number="1"> <string name="Headline" value="New Market on descent"/> <text name="Text"> <div> <p>Nemax closed with losses.</p> </div> </text> <integer name="Priority" value="42"/> <string name="Source" value="Stockresearch"/> <date name="AutoDeletedate" date="2001-01-29" time="00:00" timezone="Europe/Berlin" /> <date name="AutoPdatum" date="2001-01-22" time="22:30" timezone="Europe/Berlin"/> <linklist name="Images"><link idref="pic1"/></linklist> </version> </document>
Example 4.4. A document
The order of the field elements in the example corresponds to the order of the fields in the definition of the content type Text, but this is not required, as any order can be used.
CoreMedia XML supports the document fields of type structured and unstructured text, number, date, blob and linklist. These are now described in detail. All field elements have an attribute name for the document field. The attribute is not explicitly listed below.
<text>
Corresponds to an <XmlProperty>
in the document type definition. The
CoreMedia DTD allows PCDATA as content, the format of the <text>
content deviates at
this point from the DTD: the content of <text>
must conform to the
grammar DTD defined for the field.
<string>
Corresponds to a <StringProperty>
in the document type definition. The
attribute value holds the string content.
<string name="Heading" value="New market on descent/>
<integer>
Corresponds to an <IntProperty>
in the document type definition. The
attribute value
contains the number.
<integer name="Priority" value="42"/>
<date>
Corresponds to a <DateProperty>
in the document type definition. In
addition to the name
attribute, there are three further attributes:
date
: the date must be entered in the formatyyyy-mm-dd
, such as 2001-11-06time
: the time must be entered in the formathh:mm
, such as09:00
orhh:mm:ss
, such as23:59:59
timezone
: the format corresponds to the Java 2 API (java.util.TimeZone
), such as Europe/Berlin or GMT.
All three attributes are optional. If date
is left out, the whole date is
undefined. On the other hand, the default values
00:00
and
java.util.TimeZone.getDefault()
are used for time
and
timezone, resp
.
<date name="AutoPdate" date="2001-01-01" time="12:15"
timezone="Europe/Berlin"/>
<blob>
Corresponds to a <BlobProperty>
in the document type definition. The
element has two further attributes:
mimetype
: the MIME type must match the MIME type defined in the corresponding<BlobProperty>
element in the definition of the document type. Wildcards, likeimage/*
are not allowed.href
: the URL of a blob. It is given either absolute or relative to the value of thexml:base
attribute of the<coremedia>
element.
<blob name="onlineImage"
mimetype="image/jpeg" href="chart.jpg"/>
<linklist>
Corresponds to a <LinkListProperty>
in the document type definition. It
can have both <document>
and <link>
child elements.
<document>
children are imported like other <document>
elements. The empty element <link>
has an attribute idref
with an ID value. The consistency rules given above apply to this idref
attribute. All documents of
a <linklist>
must have a type that corresponds to the type specified with
the LinkType
attribute of the corresponding
<LinkListProperty>
.
<linklist name="Images"><link idref="pic1"/></linklist>
The content of <text> is
included in two ways:
Embedded text
Place the content in the
<text>
element.Example:
<text name="Text"> <div> <p>...Flowing text...</p> </div></text>
A separate XML resource
The content is stored in a separate resource and referred to by URL given in the
href
attribute. The XML in the resource must be well-formed. The root element depends on the DTD specified for the field type. The URL in thehref
attribute is relative to the main XML document containing the<text>
element, or absolute. If the resource is a file, do not store the file in the importerinbox
directory when the default SubDirGenerator is configured incm-xmlimport.properties
. Otherwise, the importer will try to import the file and fail.Example:
<text name="Text" href="../href/text.txt"/>
The importer selects the embedded content if <text> element contains embedded content
and a href
attribute.
Links in XML fields
You can define XML fields that conform to any DTD. To link to documents from this XML fields
use the attribute xlink:href
. The attribute value must start with the prefix
coremedia:///cap/resources/
followed by an internal or target id as shown
below:
<text name="Text"> <div><p>See<a xlink:href="coremedia:///cap/resources/info">info </a></p></div> </text>
Example 4.5. Example for the xlink:href
attribute
This example contains a link to a document with the internal id info
. The
internal id must not contain a "/" character. To link to a field of a document append a "/"
character and the name of the field.
<text name="Text"> <div><p>See<a xlink:href="coremedia:///cap/resources/info/xml"> info</a></p></div> </text>
Example 4.6. Example for a property link
This example contains a link to the field xml
in the
document with the internal id info. The field name may not contain a "/" character. If you
use a link in an <img>
tag, the link must point to the BlobProperty
of the document.
The following example contains links with target ids:
<text name="Text"> <div><p>see <a xlink:href="coremedia:///cap/resources/target:2468">info1 </a>and <a xlink:href="coremedia:///cap/resources/target:1234/xml"> info2</a> </p></div> </text>
Example 4.7. Example for links with target ids
XML fields that conform to the now deprecated coremedia-sgmltext.dtd
may link to documents
with the elements <HOX.LINK>
and <HOX.IMAGE>
as shown in the following example:
<text name="Sgmltext"> <ROOT> <P>See<HOX.LINK ID="info">info</HOX.LINK> </P></ROOT> </text>
Example 4.8. Example for the HOX.LINK
element
Both internal and target ids can be used in the attribute ID
.