- From: Sarven Capadisli <info@csarven.ca>
- Date: Tue, 08 Oct 2013 21:23:34 +0200
- To: public-lod@w3.org
- Message-ID: <52545BB6.8080404@csarven.ca>
On 10/08/2013 11:46 AM, Frans Knibbe | Geodan wrote: > I am experimenting with running SPARQL endpoints and I notice the need > to impose some limits to prevent overloading/abuse. The easiest and I > believe fairly common way to do that is to LIMIT the number of results > that the endpoint will return for a single query. > > I now wonder how I can publish the fact that my SPARQL endpoint has a > LIMIT and that is has a certain value. Besides VoID and SD as others already mentioned, here is another take on this problem: While I can see that making the feature or configuration set available and machine-friendly is a nice to have, I don't know of any tooling that's out there, is capable of factoring in this type of information. Not to mention whether the triple statements which pertain that information will be /easily/ identifiable by users. I feel that something like this is may better announced in plain ol' documentation any way. -Sarven http://csarven.ca/#i
Attachments
- application/pkcs7-signature attachment: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
Received on Tuesday, 8 October 2013 19:24:06 UTC