- From: Karen Coyle <kcoyle@kcoyle.net>
- Date: Wed, 13 Aug 2014 09:24:10 -0700
- To: public-rdf-shapes@w3.org
I can never remember where the draft charter is, but as I recall it does not specify boundaries for "RDF validation", nor does it list validation types. So wouldn't this just be another type of validation that the group could consider, without it being named in the charter? kc On 8/13/14, 8:45 AM, David Booth wrote: > Hi Peter, > > Here is my main use case for RDF canonicalization. > > The RDF Pipeline Framework http://rdfpipeline.org/ allows any kind of > data to be manipulated in a data production pipeline -- not just RDF. > The Framework has regression tests that, when run, are used to validate > the correctness of the output of each node in a pipeline. A test passes > if the actual node output exactly matches the expected node output, > *after* filtering out ignorable differences. (For example, differences > in dates and times are typically treated as ignorable -- they don't > cause a test to fail.) Since a generic comparison tool is used (because > the pipeline is permitted to carry *any* kind of data), data > serialization must be predictable and canonical. This works great for > all kinds of data *except* RDF. > > If a canonical form of RDF were defined, then the exact same tools that > are used to compare other kinds of data for differences could also be > used for comparing RDF. > > I consider this a major deficiency in RDF that really needs to be > corrected. Any significant software effort uses regression tests to > validate changes. But comparing two documents is currently complicated > and difficult with RDF data. RDF canonicalization would make it as easy > as it is for every other data representation. > > I realize that this is a slightly different -- and more stringent -- > notion of RDF validation than just looking at the general shape of the > data, because it requires that the data not only has the expected shape, > but also contains the expected *values*. Canonicalization would solve > this problem. > > Given this motivation, would you be okay with RDF canonicalization being > included as an OPTIONAL deliverable in the charter? > > Thanks, > David > > On 08/13/2014 01:11 AM, Peter F. Patel-Schneider wrote: >> I'm still not getting this at all. >> >> How does canonicalization help me determine that I got the RDF data that >> I expected (exact or otherwise)? For example, how does canonicalization >> help me determine that I got some RDF data that tells me the phone >> numbers of my friends? >> >> I just can't come up with a use case at all related to RDF data >> validation where canonicalization is relevant, except for signing RDF >> graphs, and that can just as easily be done at the surface syntax level, >> and signing is quite tangential to the WG's purpose, I think. >> >> peter >> >> >> On 08/12/2014 09:17 PM, David Booth wrote: >>> I think "canonicalization" would be a clearer term, as in: >>> >>> "OPTIONAL - A Recommendation for canonical serialization >>> of RDF graphs and RDF datasets." >>> >>> The purpose of this (to me) is to be able to validate that I got the >>> *exact* >>> RDF data that I expected -- not merely the right classes and >>> predicates and >>> such. Would you be okay with including this in the charter? >>> >>> Thanks, >>> David >>> >>> On 08/12/2014 10:00 PM, Peter F. Patel-Schneider wrote: >>>> I'm still not exactly sure just what normalization means in this >>>> context >>>> or what relationship it has to RDF validation. >>>> >>>> peter >>>> >>>> >>>> On 08/12/2014 06:55 PM, David Booth wrote: >>>>> +1 for all except one item. >>>>> >>>>> I'd like to make one last ditch attempt to include graph normalization >>>>> as an >>>>> OPTIONAL deliverable. I expect the WG to treat it as low priority, >>>>> and would >>>>> only anticipate a normalization document being produced if someone >>>>> takes the >>>>> personal initiative to draft it. I do not see any significant harm in >>>>> including it in the charter on that basis, but I do see a benefit, >>>>> because if >>>>> the WG did somehow get to it then it would damn nice to have, so that >>>>> we could >>>>> finally validate RDF data by having a standard way to compare two RDF >>>>> documents for equality, like we can routinely do with every other data >>>>> representation. >>>>> >>>>> Peter, would that be okay with you, to include graph normalization as >>>>> OPTIONAL >>>>> that way? >>>>> >>>>> Thanks, >>>>> David >>>>> >>>>> On 08/12/2014 08:55 PM, Eric Prud'hommeaux wrote: >>>>>> Hi all, we can have a face-to-face at the W3C Technical Plenary in >>>>>> November if we can quickly endorse a good-enough charter. As it >>>>>> stands now, it isn't clear that the group will be able to reach >>>>>> consensus within the Working Group, let alone get through the member >>>>>> review without objection. >>>>>> >>>>>> Please review the proposals that I've culled from the list. I >>>>>> encournage compromise on all our parts and we'll have to suppress the >>>>>> desire to wordsmith. (Given the 3-month evaluation period, >>>>>> wordsmithing won't change much anyways.) >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> separate semantics: >>>>>> >>>>>> "Peter F. Patel-Schneider" <pfpschneider@gmail.com> - Message-ID: >>>>>> <53E2AFBD.9050102@gmail.com> >>>>>> A syntax and semantics for shapes specifying how to construct >>>>>> shape >>>>>> expressions and how shape expressions are evaluated against RDF >>>>>> graphs. >>>>>> "Dam, Jesse van" <jesse.vandam@wur.nl> - Message-ID: >>>>>> <63CF398D7F09744BA51193F17F5252AB1FD60B24@SCOMP0936.wurnet.nl> >>>>>> defining the the (direct) semantics meaning of shapes and >>>>>> defining the >>>>>> associated validation process. >>>>>> >>>>>> opposition: Holger Knublauch >>>>>> >>>>>> proposed resolution: include, noting that if SPARQL is judged >>>>>> to be >>>>>> useful for the semantics, there's nothing preventing us from using >>>>>> it. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> make graph normalization optional or use-case specific: >>>>>> >>>>>> "Peter F. Patel-Schneider" <pfpschneider@gmail.com> - Message-ID: >>>>>> <53E2AFBD.9050102@gmail.com> >>>>>> 3 OPTIONAL A specification of how shape verification interacts >>>>>> with >>>>>> inference. >>>>>> Jeremy J Carroll <jjc@syapse.com> - Message-Id: >>>>>> <D954B744-05CD-4E5C-8FC2-C08A9A99BA9F@syapse.com> >>>>>> the WG will consider whether it is necessary, practical or >>>>>> desireable >>>>>> to normalize a graph... >>>>>> A graph normalization method, suitable for the use cases >>>>>> determined by >>>>>> the group.... >>>>>> David Booth <david@dbooth.org> - Message-ID: >>>>>> <53E28D07.9000804@dbooth.org> >>>>>> OPTIONAL - A Recommendation for normalization/canonicalization >>>>>> of RDF >>>>>> graphs and RDF datasets that are serialized in N-Triples and N-Quads. >>>>>> opposition - don't do it at all: >>>>>> "Peter F. Patel-Schneider" <pfpschneider@gmail.com> - Message-ID: >>>>>> <53E3A4CB.4040200@gmail.com> >>>>>> the WG should not be working on this. >>>>>> >>>>>> proposed resolution: withdrawn, to go to new light-weight, focused >>>>>> WG, >>>>>> removing this text: >>>>>> [[ >>>>>> The WG MAY produce a Recommendation for graph normalization. >>>>>> ]] >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> mandatory human-facing language: >>>>>> >>>>>> "Dam, Jesse van" <jesse.vandam@wur.nl> - Message-ID: >>>>>> <63CF398D7F09744BA51193F17F5252AB1FD60B24@SCOMP0936.wurnet.nl> >>>>>> ShExC mandatory, but potentially as a Note. >>>>>> David Booth <david@dbooth.org> - Message-ID: >>>>>> <53E28D07.9000804@dbooth.org> >>>>>> In Section 4 (Deliverables), change "OPTIONAL - Compact, >>>>>> human-readable >>>>>> syntax" to "Compact, human-readable syntax", i.e., make it required. >>>>>> Jeremy J Carroll <jjc@syapse.com> - Message-Id: >>>>>> <54AA894F-F4B4-4877-8806-EB85FB5A42E5@syapse.com> >>>>>> >>>>>> opposition - make it OPTIONAL >>>>>> "Peter F. Patel-Schneider" <pfpschneider@gmail.com> - Message-ID: >>>>>> <53E2AFBD.9050102@gmail.com> >>>>>> OPTIONAL A compact, human-readable syntax for expressing shapes. >>>>>> >>>>>> proposed resolution: keep as OPTIONAL, not mentioning ShExC, but >>>>>> clarifying that it's different from the RDF syntax. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> report formats: >>>>>> Dimitris Kontokostas <kontokostas@informatik.uni-leipzig.de> >>>>>> provide flexible validation execution plans that range from: >>>>>> Success / fail >>>>>> Success / fail per constraint >>>>>> Fails with error counts >>>>>> Individual resources that fail per constraint >>>>>> And enriched failed resources with annotations >>>>>> >>>>>> proposed resolution: no change, noting that no one seconded this >>>>>> proposal. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> test suite/validator: >>>>>> >>>>>> Dimitris Kontokostas <kontokostas@informatik.uni-leipzig.de> >>>>>> Validation results are very important for the progress of this >>>>>> WG and >>>>>> should be a standalone deliverable. >>>>>> David Booth <david@dbooth.org> - Message-ID: >>>>>> <53E28D07.9000804@dbooth.org> >>>>>> Test Suite, to help ensure interoperability and correct >>>>>> implementation. >>>>>> The group will chose the location of this deliverable, such as a git >>>>>> repository. >>>>>> >>>>>> proposed resolution: leave from charter as WGs usually choose to >>>>>> do this >>>>>> anyways and it has no impact on IP commitments. >>>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >> >> >> >> > > -- Karen Coyle kcoyle@kcoyle.net http://kcoyle.net m: 1-510-435-8234 skype: kcoylenet/+1-510-984-3600
Received on Wednesday, 13 August 2014 16:24:44 UTC