NOTE: This is Python 2.7 code and this repository is archived.
The isis2json.py is a Python/Jython script to export ISIS (MST+XRF) or ISO-2709 databases to JSON files, optionally compatible with CouchDB and MongoDB.
Running under Jython, both MST+XRF and ISO-2709 files can be read, thanks to the Bruma Java library from BIREME, bundled in the lib/ directory. Running under Python, only ISO-2709 files can be read.
A full description of how this script is used can be found in the paper From ISIS to CouchDB: Databases and Data Models for Bibliographic Records.
$ ./isis2json.py -h usage: isis2json.py [-h] [-o OUTPUT.json] [-c] [-m] [-t ISIS_JSON_TYPE] [-q QTY] [-s SKIP] [-i TAG_NUMBER] [-u] [-p PREFIX] [-n] [-k TAG:VALUE] INPUT.(mst|iso) Convert an ISIS .mst or .iso file to a JSON array positional arguments: INPUT.(mst|iso) .mst or .iso file to read optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -o OUTPUT.json, --out OUTPUT.json the file where the JSON output should be written (default: write to stdout) -c, --couch output array within a "docs" item in a JSON document for bulk insert to CouchDB via POST to db/_bulk_docs -m, --mongo output individual records as separate JSON objects, one per line for bulk insert to MongoDB via mongoimport utility -t ISIS_JSON_TYPE, --type ISIS_JSON_TYPE ISIS-JSON type, sets field structure: 1=string, 2=alist, 3=dict -q QTY, --qty QTY maximum quantity of records to read (default=ALL) -s SKIP, --skip SKIP records to skip from start of .mst (default=0) -i TAG_NUMBER, --id TAG_NUMBER generate an "_id" from the given unique TAG field number for each record -u, --uuid generate an "_id" with a random UUID for each record -p PREFIX, --prefix PREFIX concatenate prefix to every numeric field tag (ex. 99 becomes "v99") -n, --mfn generate an "_id" from the MFN of each record (available only for .mst input) -k TAG:VALUE, --constant TAG:VALUE Include a constant tag:value in every record (ex. -k type:AS)
There are many ways to represent CDS/ISIS records in JSON [1]. This utility currently exports ISIS-JSON types 1, 2 and 3.
Given an ISIS record with this strcuture:
2 «538886» 10 «Kanda, Paulo Afonso^1USP^2FMUSP^3CRDC^pBrasil^cSão Paulo^rorg» 10 «Smidth, Magali Taino^1USP^2FMUSP^3CRDC^pBrasil^cSão Paulo^rorg»
Below are the three supported representations of that record in JSON:
{"10": ["Kanda, Paulo Afonso^1USP^2FMUSP^3CRDC^pBrasil^cSão Paulo^rorg", "Smidth, Magali Taino^1USP^2FMUSP^3CRDC^pBrasil^cSão Paulo^rorg"], "2": ["538886"] }
{"10": [ [ ("_", "Kanda, Paulo Afonso"), ("1", "USP"), ("2", "FMUSP"), ("3", "CRDC"), ("p", "Brasil"), ("c", "São Paulo"), ("r", "org") ], [ ("_", "Smidth, Magali Taino"), ("1", "USP"), ("2", "FMUSP"), ("3", "CRDC"), ("p", "Brasil"), ("c", "São Paulo"), ("r", "org") ] ], "2": [ [ ("_", "538886") ] ] }
{"10": [ { "_": "Kanda, Paulo Afonso", "1": "USP", "2": "FMUSP", "3": "CRDC", "c": "São Paulo", "p": "Brasil", "r": "org" }, { "_": "Smidth, Magali Taino", "1": "USP", "2": "FMUSP", "3": "CRDC", "c": "São Paulo", "p": "Brasil", "r": "org" } ], "2": [ { "_": "538886" } ] }
[1] | See section 4.1 of http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/4893 |
Under Python, isis2json.py depends on:
- Python2.6 or 2.7
- argparse.py (bundled; also part of the CPython 2.7 distribution)
Under Jython, isis2json.py depends on:
- Jython 2.5;
- argparse.py (bundled)
- Bruma.jar on the CLASSPATH (bundled);
- jyson-1.0.1.jar on the CLASSPATH (bundled);
Example CLASSPATH:
export CLASSPATH=/home/luciano/lib/Bruma.jar:/home/luciano/lib/jyson-1.0.1.jar
If you see this:
Traceback (innermost last): (no code object) at line 0 File "./isis2json.py", line 84 yield fields ^ SyntaxError: invalid syntax
You are probably running Jython 2.2, an old version that is packaged with several Linux distributions such as Debian and Ubuntu. To verify, type:
$ jython --version Jython 2.2.1 on java1.6.0_20
To fix, download and install Jython 2.5 or later from Jython.org.
Check if Jython 2.5 or later is installed:
$ jython --version Jython 2.5.2
If it is not, se issue above. If it is, add the path to Bruma.jar to the CLASSPATH environment variable, or pass it via the jython -J-cp command line option when running isis2json.py, like this:
$ jython -J-cp lib/jyson-1.0.1.jar:lib/Bruma.jar isis2json.py fixtures/LILACS1.mst