1 / 23

Introducing CMIS

Introducing CMIS. David Caruana & Michael Farman 25th September 2008. Agenda. Background to CMIS Specification Overview Alfresco CMIS Implementation Demonstration Next Steps. Founding members IBM, Microsoft, EMC Timeline Spec as been in development for approx 2 years

robert
Télécharger la présentation

Introducing CMIS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introducing CMIS David Caruana & Michael Farman 25th September 2008

  2. Agenda • Background to CMIS • Specification Overview • Alfresco CMIS Implementation • Demonstration • Next Steps

  3. Founding members IBM, Microsoft, EMC Timeline Spec as been in development for approx 2 years Contributing Members invited Aug 07 Draft Spec Submitted to OASIS 10th Sept 2008 Contributing members Alfresco, Open Text, SAP, Oracle (BEA) Approach Standardizing existing ECM implementations Minimizing initial scope For broad acceptance Background / History

  4. What is CMIS? • “The objective of the CMIS standard is to define a common content management web services interface that can be implemented by content repositories and enable interoperability across repositories.” • A (draft) standard defining APIs to support interoperability with ECM systems • CMIS defines: • Model e.g. Types, Relationships • Standardised Query Language • Protocol Bindings e.g. REST, Web Services • Services e.g. Check out/in, versioning

  5. Why CMIS? • Most large organisations have multiple ECM solutions • No standard across ECM systems • Proprietary specific APIs • Proprietary Query interfaces • Language dependent Java vs .Net … • One-off integrations • No reuse • Expensive to implement, maintain

  6. Collaborative Content Creation Authentication, Checkin/out, Version Control Portals Browsing, properties, indexing, search Mashups URL addressability, properties Archival Applications Properties, indexing and search Compound Documents Relationships Electronic Legal Discovery Versioning, properties, indexing, search Target Use Cases

  7. Non-Target Use Cases • Maybe addressed in future CMIS versions • Records Management & Compliance • Retention schedules, classification, legal holds • Digital Asset Management • Renditions, streaming • Web Content Management • Templates, staging, preview, deployment . . . • Subscription/Notification Services • Event triggers

  8. Why not using an existing standard? WebDAV No types and properties No Query No relationships Tied to HTTP Atom Publishing Protocol (APP) HTTP and resource specific Note: CMIS builds on APP conventions CMIS and Other Standards • JCR-170/283 • Java Only • Too prescriptive • Requires changes to core ECM capabilities to support specific features and models • Not service oriented • Requires persistent connections • Unsuited to Mashups

  9. CMIS Specification Status & Next Steps • Successful Vendor Interoperability Workshop • All 7 vendors • CMIS Providers and Clients Tested • REST and Web Services Protocol Bindings • Draft submitted to OASIS 10th Sept 08 • Technical Committee Formed • First Meeting 25th Sept 08 • Official Ratification TBD

  10. Specification Overview • Part I - Encapsulates ECM experience • Defines Domain Model • Defines Services i.e. interaction with Model • Common to ECM repositories • Part II – Map Part I to Protocol Bindings • SOAP / WSDL • Leverage years of investment in infrastructure/tools • Service-oriented • Content Repository orchestration • REST • “Web 2.0” stack • Resource-oriented • Content syndication / publishing

  11. CMIS Domain Model

  12. CMIS Meta Model *

  13. CMIS Services

  14. CMIS Query

  15. CMIS SOAP Binding • WSDL definition… • XML schema for CMIS Domain Model • XML schema for Service messages • Direct exposure of CMIS (Part I) Services • Generate client API for almost all languages • WS-Security & Username Token Profile (MUST) • WS-I Basic Profile & Basic Security Profile • MTOM content transfers

  16. CMIS REST Binding • ATOM Publishing Protocol • ATOM syndication format for web feeds (GET) • Create & update web resources (POST, PUT, DELETE) • Extension mechanism supported • CMIS extension • XML Schema for CMIS Domain Model • As used in SOAP Binding • New Web Resources / Method mappings • Use any existing HTTP or ATOM client API

  17. Atom Publishing Protocol to CMIS Service Document AtomPub CMIS Atom Feed Atom Entry Additional Atom Feeds

  18. Alfresco Draft CMIS Implementation Available Now in Alfresco Labs 3B

  19. Alfresco Implementation Stack CMIS REST Client CMIS WS Client CMIS REST API CMIS Web Services Web Scripts Apache CXF Apache Abdera CMIS Extension Alfresco Repository

  20. Alfresco CMIS Strategy • Actively contribute to specification • Continue to update draft implementation based up updates • Provide Open Source implementation as spec evolves • Provide 100% compliance • Productised CMIS Client Support and Tools

  21. Demo

  22. Next Steps • Alfresco wiki page on CMIS • http://wiki.alfresco.com/wiki/CMIS • Take part in the CMIS Survey • http://wiki.alfresco.com/wiki/CMIS#References • Download specification • http://www.alfresco.com/about/cmis/cmis-draft-v0.5.zip • Try out Draft CMIS Implementation • Alfresco Labs 3b - http://wiki.alfresco.com/wiki/CMIS • Subscribe to CMIS Blog • http://blogs.alfresco.com/cmis/ • Discuss in CMIS forum • http://forums.alfresco.com

  23. Introducing CMISQuestions? Michael Farman 25th September 2008 Thanks for Attending

More Related