Semantic Annotations for Linked Avro Data (SALAD) §
Author:
- Peter Amstutz peter.amstutz@curii.com, Curii Corporation
Contributors:
- The developers of Apache Avro
- The developers of JSON-LD
- Nebojša Tijanić nebojsa.tijanic@sbgenomics.com, Seven Bridges Genomics
- Michael R. Crusoe, ELIXIR-DE
Abstract §
Salad is a schema language for describing structured linked data documents in JSON or YAML documents. A Salad schema provides rules for preprocessing, structural validation, and link checking for documents described by a Salad schema. Salad builds on JSON-LD and the Apache Avro data serialization system, and extends Avro with features for rich data modeling such as inheritance, template specialization, object identifiers, and object references. Salad was developed to provide a bridge between the record oriented data modeling supported by Apache Avro and the Semantic Web.
Status of This Document §
This document is the product of the Common Workflow Language working group. The latest version of this document is available in the "schema_salad" repository at
https://github.com/common-workflow-language/schema_salad
The products of the CWL working group (including this document) are made available under the terms of the Apache License, version 2.0.
Table of contents
1. Introduction §
The JSON data model is an extremely popular way to represent structured data. It is attractive because of its relative simplicity and is a natural fit with the standard types of many programming languages. However, this simplicity means that basic JSON lacks expressive features useful for working with complex data structures and document formats, such as schemas, object references, and namespaces.
JSON-LD is a W3C standard providing a way to describe how to interpret a JSON document as Linked Data by means of a "context". JSON-LD provides a powerful solution for representing object references and namespaces in JSON based on standard web URIs, but is not itself a schema language. Without a schema providing a well defined structure, it is difficult to process an arbitrary JSON-LD document as idiomatic JSON because there are many ways to express the same data that are logically equivalent but structurally distinct.
Several schema languages exist for describing and validating JSON data, such as the Apache Avro data serialization system, however none understand linked data. As a result, to fully take advantage of JSON-LD to build the next generation of linked data applications, one must maintain separate JSON schema, JSON-LD context, RDF schema, and human documentation, despite significant overlap of content and obvious need for these documents to stay synchronized.
Schema Salad is designed to address this gap. It provides a schema language and processing rules for describing structured JSON content permitting URI resolution and strict document validation. The schema language supports linked data through annotations that describe the linked data interpretation of the content, enables generation of JSON-LD context and RDF schema, and production of RDF triples by applying the JSON-LD context. The schema language also provides for robust support of inline documentation.
1.1 Introduction to v1.1 §
This is the third version of the Schema Salad specification. It is developed concurrently with v1.1 of the Common Workflow Language for use in specifying the Common Workflow Language, however Schema Salad is intended to be useful to a broader audience. Compared to the v1.0 schema salad specification, the following changes have been made:
- Support for
default
values on record fields to specify default values - Add subscoped fields (fields which introduce a new inner scope for identifiers)
- Add the inVocab flag (default true) to indicate if a type is added to the vocabulary of well known terms or must be prefixed
- Add secondaryFilesDSL micro DSL (domain specific language) to convert text strings to a secondaryFiles record type used in CWL
- The
$mixin
feature has been removed from the specification, as it is poorly documented, not included in conformance testing, and not widely supported.
1.2 Introduction to v1.2 §
This is the fourth version of the Schema Salad specification. It was created to ease the development of extensions to CWL v1.2. The only change is that inherited records can narrow the types of fields if those fields are re-specified with a matching jsonldPredicate.
1.2.1 Changelog for v1.2.1 §
There are no new features nor behavior changes in Schema Salad v1.2.1 as compared to Schema-Salad v1.2. Schema Salad v1.2.1 only fixes typos and adds clarifications.
- The
salad
directory's contents have been trimmed to the bare necessities. Thesalad/README.rst
has been refreshed from the upstream repository. - The existing behaviour of
$import
has been clarified. If the$import
node is in an array and the import operation yields an array, it is flattened to the parent array. Otherwise the$import
node is replaced in the document structure by the object or array yielded from the import operation. An additional example has been added to illustrate this better. - A pair of missing brackets was added to the Type DSL Example's example input.
- Missing newlines have been added to the identifier map example's example source and example result.
- Inherited fields in Salad types may be re-specified to narrow their type and/or to override the
doc
field. - Clarify that fields with
jsonldPredicate: { _type: "@id" }
indicate that the field is a link fields and that if thejsonldPredicate
also has the fieldidentity
with the valuetrue
, then field is resolved with identifier resolution. Otherwise the field is resolved with link resolution.
1.3 References to Other Specifications §
Javascript Object Notation (JSON): http://json.org
JSON Linked Data (JSON-LD): http://json-ld.org
YAML: https://yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html
Avro: https://avro.apache.org/docs/current/spec.html
Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) Generic Syntax: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986)
Resource Description Framework (RDF): http://www.w3.org/RDF/
UTF-8: https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2279.txt)
1.4 Scope §
This document describes the syntax, data model, algorithms, and schema language for working with Salad documents. It is not intended to document a specific implementation of Salad, however it may serve as a reference for the behavior of conforming implementations.
1.5 Terminology §
The terminology used to describe Salad documents is defined in the Concepts section of the specification. The terms defined in the following list are used in building those definitions and in describing the actions of a Salad implementation:
may: Conforming Salad documents and Salad implementations are permitted but not required to be interpreted as described.
must: Conforming Salad documents and Salad implementations are required to be interpreted as described; otherwise they are in error.
error: A violation of the rules of this specification; results are undefined. Conforming implementations may detect and report an error and may recover from it.
fatal error: A violation of the rules of this specification; results are undefined. Conforming implementations must not continue to process the document and may report an error.
at user option: Conforming software may or must (depending on the modal verb in the sentence) behave as described; if it does, it must provide users a means to enable or disable the behavior described.
2. Document model §
2.1 Data concepts §
An object is a data structure equivalent to the "object" type in JSON, consisting of a unordered set of name/value pairs (referred to here as fields) and where the name is a string and the value is a string, number, boolean, array, or object.
A document is a file containing a serialized object, or an array of objects.
A document type is a class of files that share a common structure and semantics.
A document schema is a formal description of the grammar of a document type.
A base URI is a context-dependent URI used to resolve relative references.
An identifier is a URI that designates a single document or single object within a document.
A vocabulary is the set of symbolic field names and enumerated symbols defined by a document schema, where each term maps to absolute URI.
2.2 Syntax §
Conforming Salad v1.1 documents are serialized and loaded using a subset of YAML 1.2 syntax and UTF-8 text encoding. Salad documents are written using the JSON-compatible subset of YAML described in section 10.2. The following features of YAML must not be used in conforming Salad documents:
- Use of explicit node tags with leading
!
or!!
- Use of anchors with leading
&
and aliases with leading*
- %YAML directives
- %TAG directives
It is a fatal error if the document is not valid YAML.
A Salad document must consist only of either a single root object or an array of objects.
2.3 Document context §
2.3.1 Implied context §
The implicit context consists of the vocabulary defined by the schema and the base URI. By default, the base URI must be the URI that was used to load the document. It may be overridden by an explicit context.
2.3.2 Explicit context §
If a document consists of a root object, this object may contain the
fields $base
, $namespaces
, $schemas
, and $graph
:
$base
: Must be a string. Set the base URI for the document used to resolve relative references.$namespaces
: Must be an object with strings as values. The keys of the object are namespace prefixes used in the document; the values of the object are the prefix expansions.$schemas
: Must be an array of strings. This field may list URI references to documents in RDF-XML format which will be queried for RDF schema data. The subjects and predicates described by the RDF schema may provide additional semantic context for the document, and may be used for validation of prefixed extension fields found in the document.
Other directives beginning with $
must be ignored.
2.4 Document graph §
If a document consists of a single root object, this object may contain the
field $graph
. This field must be an array of objects. If present, this
field holds the primary content of the document. A document that consists
of array of objects at the root is an implicit graph.
2.5 Document metadata §
If a document consists of a single root object, metadata about the document, such as authorship, may be declared in the root object.
2.6 Document schema §
Document preprocessing, link validation and schema validation require a document schema. A schema may consist of:
At least one record definition object which defines valid fields that make up a record type. Record field definitions include the valid types that may be assigned to each field and annotations to indicate fields that represent identifiers and links, described below in "Semantic Annotations".
Any number of enumerated type objects which define a set of finite set of symbols that are valid value of the type.
Any number of documentation objects which allow in-line documentation of the schema.
The schema for defining a salad schema (the metaschema) is described in detail in the Schema section.
2.7 Record field annotations §
In a document schema, record field definitions may include the field
jsonldPredicate
, which may be either a string or object. Implementations
must use the following document preprocessing of fields by the following
rules:
If the value of
jsonldPredicate
is@id
, the field is an identifier field.If the value of
jsonldPredicate
is an object, and that object contains the field_type
with the value@id
, the field is a link field. If the fieldjsonldPredicate
also has the fieldidentity
with the valuetrue
, the field is resolved with identifier resolution. Otherwise it is resolved with link resolution.If the value of
jsonldPredicate
is an object which contains the field_type
with the value@vocab
, the field value is subject to vocabulary resolution.
2.8 Document traversal §
To perform document preprocessing, link validation and schema validation, the document must be traversed starting from the fields or array items of the root object or array and recursively visiting each child item which contains an object or arrays.
2.9 Short names §
The "short name" of a fully qualified identifier is the portion of
the identifier following the final slash /
of either the fragment
identifier following #
or the path portion, if there is no fragment.
Some examples:
- the short name of
http://example.com/foo
isfoo
- the short name of
http://example.com/#bar
isbar
- the short name of
http://example.com/foo/bar
isbar
- the short name of
http://example.com/foo#bar
isbar
- the short name of
http://example.com/#foo/bar
isbar
- the short name of
http://example.com/foo#bar/baz
isbaz
2.10 Inheritance and specialization §
A record definition may inherit from one or more record definitions
with the extends
field. This copies the fields defined in the
parent record(s) as the base for the new record. A record definition
may specialize
type declarations of the fields inherited from the
base record. For each field inherited from the base record, any
instance of the type in specializeFrom
is replaced with the type in
specializeTo
. The type in specializeTo
should extend from the
type in specializeFrom
.
A record definition may be abstract
. This means the record
definition is not used for validation on its own, but may be extended
by other definitions. If an abstract type appears in a field
definition, it is logically replaced with a union of all concrete
subtypes of the abstract type. In other words, the field value does
not validate as the abstract type, but must validate as some concrete
type that inherits from the abstract type.
3. Document preprocessing §
After processing the explicit context (if any), document preprocessing
begins. Starting from the document root, object fields values or array
items which contain objects or arrays are recursively traversed
depth-first. For each visited object, field names, identifier fields, link
fields, vocabulary fields, and $import
and $include
directives must be
processed as described in this section. The order of traversal of child
nodes within a parent node is undefined.
3.1 Field name resolution §
The document schema declares the vocabulary of known field names. During preprocessing traversal, field name in the document which are not part of the schema vocabulary must be resolved to absolute URIs. Under "strict" validation, it is an error for a document to include fields which are not part of the vocabulary and not resolvable to absolute URIs. Fields names which are not part of the vocabulary are resolved using the following rules:
If a field name URI begins with a namespace prefix declared in the document context (
@context
) followed by a colon:
, the prefix and colon must be replaced by the namespace declared in@context
.If there is a vocabulary term which maps to the URI of a resolved field, the field name must be replace with the vocabulary term.
If a field name URI is an absolute URI consisting of a scheme and path and is not part of the vocabulary, no processing occurs.
Field name resolution is not relative. It must not be affected by the base URI.
3.1.1 Field name resolution example §
Given the following schema:
{
"$namespaces": {
"acid": "http://example.com/acid#"
},
"$graph": [{
"name": "ExampleType",
"type": "record",
"documentRoot": true,
"fields": [{
"name": "base",
"type": "string",
"jsonldPredicate": "http://example.com/base"
}]
}]
}
Process the following example:
{
"base": "one",
"form": {
"http://example.com/base": "two",
"http://example.com/three": "three",
},
"acid:four": "four"
}
This becomes:
{
"base": "one",
"form": {
"base": "two",
"http://example.com/three": "three",
},
"http://example.com/acid#four": "four"
}
3.2 Identifier resolution §
The schema may designate one or more fields as identifier fields to identify specific objects. Processing must resolve relative identifiers to absolute identifiers using the following rules:
If an identifier URI begins with
#
it is a current document fragment identifier. It is resolved relative to the base URI by setting or replacing the fragment portion of the base URI.If an identifier URI contains
#
in some other position it is a relative URI with fragment identifier. It is resolved relative to the base URI by stripping the last path segment from the base URI and adding the identifier followed by the fragment.If an identifier URI does not contain a scheme and does not contain
#
it is a parent relative fragment identifier.If an identifier URI is a parent relative fragment identifier and the base URI does not contain a document fragment, set the document fragment on the base URI.
If an identifier URI is a parent relative fragment identifier and the object containing this identifier is assigned to a parent object field defined with
subscope
injsonldPredicate
, append a slash/
to the base URI fragment followed by the value of the parent fieldsubscope
. Then append the identifier as described in the next rule.If an identifier URI is a parent relative fragment identifier and the base URI contains a document fragment, append a slash
/
to the fragment followed by the identifier field to the fragment portion of the base URI.If an identifier URI begins with a namespace prefix declared in
$namespaces
followed by a colon:
, the prefix and colon must be replaced by the namespace declared in$namespaces
.If an identifier URI is an absolute URI consisting of a scheme and path, no processing occurs.
When preprocessing visits a node containing an identifier, that identifier must be used as the base URI to process child nodes.
It is an error for more than one object in a document to have the same absolute URI.
3.2.1 Identifier resolution example §
Given the following schema:
{
"$namespaces": {
"acid": "http://example.com/acid#"
},
"$graph": [{
"name": "ExampleType",
"type": "record",
"documentRoot": true,
"fields": [{
"name": "id",
"type": "string",
"jsonldPredicate": "@id"
}]}, {
"name": "SubscopeType",
"type": "record",
"fields": [{
"name": "subscopeField",
"type": "ExampleType",
"jsonldPredicate": {
"subscope": "thisIsASubscope"
}
}]
}]
}
Process the following example:
{
"id": "http://example.com/base",
"form": {
"id": "one",
"things": [
{
"id": "two"
},
{
"id": "#three",
},
{
"id": "four#five",
},
{
"id": "acid:six",
},
{
"subscopeField": {
"id": "seven"
}
}
],
}
}
This becomes:
{
"id": "http://example.com/base",
"form": {
"id": "http://example.com/base#one",
"things": [
{
"id": "http://example.com/base#one/two"
},
{
"id": "http://example.com/base#three"
},
{
"id": "http://example.com/four#five",
},
{
"id": "http://example.com/acid#six",
},
{
"subscopeField": {
"id": "http://example.com/base#one/thisIsASubscope/seven"
}
}
],
}
}
3.3 Link resolution §
The schema may designate one or more fields as link fields that reference other objects. Processing must resolve links to absolute URIs using the following rules:
If a reference URI is prefixed with
#
it is a relative fragment identifier. It is resolved relative to the base URI by setting or replacing the fragment portion of the base URI.If a reference URI does not contain a scheme and is not prefixed with
#
it is a path relative reference. If the reference URI contains#
in any position other than the first character, the reference URI must be divided into a path portion and a fragment portion split on the first instance of#
. The path portion is resolved relative to the base URI by the following rule: if the path portion of the base URI ends in a slash/
, append the path portion of the reference URI to the path portion of the base URI. If the path portion of the base URI does not end in a slash, replace the final path segment with the path portion of the reference URI. Replace the fragment portion of the base URI with the fragment portion of the reference URI.If a reference URI begins with a namespace prefix declared in
$namespaces
followed by a colon:
, the prefix and colon must be replaced by the namespace declared in$namespaces
.If a reference URI is an absolute URI consisting of a scheme and path, no processing occurs.
Link resolution must not affect the base URI used to resolve identifiers and other links.
3.3.1 Link resolution example §
Given the following schema:
{
"$namespaces": {
"acid": "http://example.com/acid#"
},
"$graph": [{
"name": "ExampleType",
"type": "record",
"fields": [{
"name": "link",
"type": "string",
"jsonldPredicate": {
"_type": "@id"
}
}]
}]
}
Process the following example:
{
"$base": "http://example.com/base",
"link": "http://example.com/base/zero",
"form": {
"link": "one",
"things": [
{
"link": "two"
},
{
"link": "#three",
},
{
"link": "four#five",
},
{
"link": "acid:six",
}
]
}
}
This becomes:
{
"$base": "http://example.com/base",
"link": "http://example.com/base/zero",
"form": {
"link": "http://example.com/one",
"things": [
{
"link": "http://example.com/two"
},
{
"link": "http://example.com/base#three"
},
{
"link": "http://example.com/four#five",
},
{
"link": "http://example.com/acid#six",
}
]
}
}
3.4 Vocabulary resolution §
The schema may designate one or more vocabulary fields which use terms defined in the vocabulary. The vocabulary are the short names of all the identifiers in the schema. Processing must resolve vocabulary fields to either vocabulary terms or absolute URIs by first applying the link resolution rules defined above, then applying the following additional rule:
- If a reference URI is a vocabulary field, and there is a vocabulary term which maps to the resolved URI, the reference must be replaced with the vocabulary term.
3.4.1 Vocabulary resolution example §
Given the following schema:
{
"$namespaces": {
"acid": "http://example.com/acid#"
},
"$graph": [{
"name": "Colors",
"type": "enum",
"symbols": ["acid:red"]
},
{
"name": "ExampleType",
"type": "record",
"fields": [{
"name": "voc",
"type": "string",
"jsonldPredicate": {
"_type": "@vocab"
}
}]
}]
}
Process the following example:
{
"form": {
"things": [
{
"voc": "red",
},
{
"voc": "http://example.com/acid#red",
},
{
"voc": "http://example.com/acid#blue",
}
]
}
}
This becomes:
{
"form": {
"things": [
{
"voc": "red",
},
{
"voc": "red",
},
{
"voc": "http://example.com/acid#blue",
}
]
}
}
3.5 Import §
During preprocessing traversal, an implementation must resolve $import
directives. An $import
directive is an object consisting of exactly one
field $import
specifying resource by URI string. It is an error if there
are additional fields in the $import
object, such additional fields must
be ignored.
The URI string must be resolved to an absolute URI using the link
resolution rules described previously. Implementations must support
loading from file
, http
and https
resources. The URI referenced by
$import
must be loaded and recursively preprocessed as a Salad document.
The external imported document does not inherit the context of the
importing document, and the default base URI for processing the imported
document must be the URI used to retrieve the imported document. If the
$import
URI includes a document fragment, the fragment must be excluded
from the base URI used to preprocess the imported document.
If the $import
node is in an array and the import operation yields an array,
it is flattened to the parent array. Otherwise the $import
node is replaced
in the document structure by the object or array yielded from the import operation.
URIs may reference document fragments which refer to specific an object in
the target document. This indicates that the $import
node must be
replaced by only the object with the appropriate fragment identifier.
It is a fatal error if an import directive refers to an external resource or resource fragment which does not exist or is not accessible.
3.5.1 Import example: replacing the $import
node §
import.json:
{
"hello": "world"
}
parent.json:
{
"form": {
"bar": {
"$import": "import.json"
}
}
}
This becomes:
{
"form": {
"bar": {
"hello": "world"
}
}
}
### 3.5.2 Import example: flattening the `$import`ed array
import.json:
[ "hello", "world" ]
parent.json:
{
"form": [
"bar",
{
"$import": "import.json"
}
]
}
This becomes:
{
"form": [
"bar",
"hello",
"world"
]
}
3.6 Include §
During preprocessing traversal, an implementation must resolve $include
directives. An $include
directive is an object consisting of exactly one
field $include
specifying a URI string. It is an error if there are
additional fields in the $include
object, such additional fields must be
ignored.
The URI string must be resolved to an absolute URI using the link
resolution rules described previously. The URI referenced by $include
must
be loaded as a text data. Implementations must support loading from
file
, http
and https
resources. Implementations may transcode the
character encoding of the text data to match that of the parent document,
but must not interpret or parse the text document in any other way.
Once loaded, the $include
node is replaced in the document structure by a
string containing the text data loaded from the resource.
It is a fatal error if an import directive refers to an external resource which does not exist or is not accessible.
3.6.1 Include example §
parent.json:
{
"form": {
"bar": {
"$include": "include.txt"
}
}
}
include.txt:
hello world
This becomes:
{
"form": {
"bar": "hello world"
}
}
3.7 Identifier maps §
The schema may designate certain fields as having a mapSubject
. If the
value of the field is a JSON object, it must be transformed into an array of
JSON objects. Each key-value pair from the source JSON object is a list
item, each list item must be a JSON object, and the value of the key is
assigned to the field specified by mapSubject
.
Fields which have mapSubject
specified may also supply a mapPredicate
.
If the value of a map item is not a JSON object, the item is transformed to a
JSON object with the key assigned to the field specified by mapSubject
and
the value assigned to the field specified by mapPredicate
.
3.7.1 Identifier map example §
Given the following schema:
{
"$graph": [{
"name": "MappedType",
"type": "record",
"documentRoot": true,
"fields": [{
"name": "mapped",
"type": {
"type": "array",
"items": "ExampleRecord"
},
"jsonldPredicate": {
"mapSubject": "key",
"mapPredicate": "value"
}
}],
},
{
"name": "ExampleRecord",
"type": "record",
"fields": [{
"name": "key",
"type": "string"
}, {
"name": "value",
"type": "string"
}
]
}]
}
Process the following example:
{
"mapped": {
"shaggy": {
"value": "scooby"
},
"fred": "daphne"
}
}
This becomes:
{
"mapped": [
{
"value": "daphne",
"key": "fred"
},
{
"value": "scooby",
"key": "shaggy"
}
]
}
3.8 Domain Specific Language for types §
Fields may be tagged typeDSL: true
in jsonldPredicate
. If so, the field is expanded using the
following micro-DSL for schema salad types:
- If the type ends with a question mark
?
, the question mark is stripped off and the type is expanded to a union withnull
- If the type ends with square brackets
[]
it is expanded to an array with items of the preceding type symbol - The type may end with both
[]?
to indicate it is an optional array. - Identifier resolution is applied after type DSL expansion.
3.8.1 Type DSL example §
Given the following schema:
{
"$graph": [
{"$import": "metaschema_base.yml"},
{
"name": "TypeDSLExample",
"type": "record",
"documentRoot": true,
"fields": [{
"name": "extype",
"type": "string",
"jsonldPredicate": {
_type: "@vocab",
"typeDSL": true
}
}]
}]
}
Process the following example:
[{
"extype": "string"
}, {
"extype": "string?"
}, {
"extype": "string[]"
}, {
"extype": "string[]?"
}]
This becomes:
[
{
"extype": "string"
},
{
"extype": [
"null",
"string"
]
},
{
"extype": {
"type": "array",
"items": "string"
}
},
{
"extype": [
"null",
{
"type": "array",
"items": "string"
}
]
}
]
3.9 Domain Specific Language for secondary files §
Fields may be tagged secondaryFilesDSL: true
in jsonldPredicate
. If so, the field is expanded using the
following micro-DSL for secondary files:
- If the value is a string, it is transformed to an object with two fields
pattern
andrequired
- By default, the value of
required
isnull
(this indicates default behavior, which may be based on the context) - If the value ends with a question mark
?
the question mark is stripped off and the value of the fieldrequired
is set toFalse
- The remaining value is assigned to the field
pattern
3.9.1 Type DSL example §
Given the following schema:
{
"$graph": [
{
"name": "SecondaryFilesDSLExample",
"type": "record",
"documentRoot": true,
"fields": [{
"name": "secondaryFiles",
"type": "string",
"jsonldPredicate": {
_type: "@vocab",
"secondaryFilesDSL": true
}
}]
}]
}
Process the following example:
[{
"secondaryFiles": ".bai"
}, {
"secondaryFiles": ".bai?"
}, {
"secondaryFiles": {
"pattern": ".bai?"
}}, {
"secondaryFiles": {
"pattern": ".bai?",
"required": true
}}]
This becomes:
[
{
"secondaryFiles": {
"pattern": ".bai",
"required": null
},
{
"secondaryFiles": {
"pattern": ".bai",
"required": false
},
{
"secondaryFiles": {
"pattern": ".bai?"
},
{
"secondaryFiles": {
"pattern": ".bai?",
"required": true
},
]
4. SaladRecordSchema §
Fields
type
record
Must be record
inVocab
If "true" (the default), include the short name of this type in the vocabulary. The vocabulary are all the symbols (field names and other identifiers, such as classes and enum values) which can be used in the document without a namespace prefix. These are the keys of the JSON-LD context. If false, do not include the short name in the vocabulary.
This is useful for specifying schema extensions that will be included in validation without introducing ambiguity by introducing non-standard terms into the vocabulary.
fields
Defines the fields of the record.
doc
A documentation string for this object, or an array of strings which should be concatenated.
docParent
Hint to indicate that during documentation generation, documentation
for this type should appear in a subsection under docParent
.
docChild
Hint to indicate that during documentation generation, documentation
for docChild
should appear in a subsection under this type.
docAfter
Hint to indicate that during documentation generation, documentation
for this type should appear after the docAfter
section at the same
level.
documentRoot
If true, indicates that the type is a valid at the document root. At
least one type in a schema must be tagged with documentRoot: true
.
abstract
If true, this record is abstract and may be used as a base for other records, but is not valid on its own. Inherited fields may be re-specified to narrow their type.
extends
Indicates that this record inherits fields from one or more base records. Inherited fields may be re-specified to narrow their type.
specialize
Only applies if extends
is declared. Apply type specialization using the
base record as a template. For each field inherited from the base
record, replace any instance of the type specializeFrom
with
specializeTo
.
4.1 SaladRecordField §
A field of a record.
Fields
type
The field type
doc
A documentation string for this object, or an array of strings which should be concatenated.
4.1.1 PrimitiveType §
Names of salad data types (based on Avro schema declarations).
Refer to the Avro schema declaration documentation for detailed information.
Symbols
symbol | description |
---|---|
null | no value |
boolean | a binary value |
int | 32-bit signed integer |
long | 64-bit signed integer |
float | single precision (32-bit) IEEE 754 floating-point number |
double | double precision (64-bit) IEEE 754 floating-point number |
string | Unicode character sequence |
4.1.2 Any §
The Any type validates for any non-null value.
Symbols
symbol | description |
---|---|
Any |
4.1.3 RecordSchema §
Fields
type
record
Must be record
fields
Defines the fields of the record.
4.1.4 RecordField §
A field of a record.
Fields
type
The field type
4.1.4.1 EnumSchema §
Define an enumerated type.
Fields
type
enum
Must be enum
4.1.4.2 ArraySchema §
Fields
items
Defines the type of the array elements.
type
array
Must be array
4.1.5 JsonldPredicate §
Attached to a record field to define how the parent record field is handled for URI resolution and JSON-LD context generation.
Fields
_id
The predicate URI that this field corresponds to.
Corresponds to JSON-LD @id
directive.
_type
The context type hint, corresponds to JSON-LD @type
directive.
If the value of this field is
@id
andidentity
is false or unspecified, the parent field must be resolved using the link resolution rules. Ifidentity
is true, the parent field must be resolved using the identifier expansion rules.If the value of this field is
@vocab
, the parent field must be resolved using the vocabulary resolution rules.
identity
If true and _type
is @id
this indicates that the parent field must
be resolved according to identity resolution rules instead of link
resolution rules. In addition, the field value is considered an
assertion that the linked value exists; absence of an object in the loaded document
with the URI is not an error.
noLinkCheck
If true, this indicates that link validation traversal must stop at this field. This field (it is is a URI) or any fields under it (if it is an object or array) are not subject to link checking.
mapSubject
If the value of the field is a JSON object, it must be transformed
into an array of JSON objects, where each key-value pair from the
source JSON object is a list item, the list items must be JSON objects,
and the key is assigned to the field specified by mapSubject
.
mapPredicate
Only applies if mapSubject
is also provided. If the value of the
field is a JSON object, it is transformed as described in mapSubject
,
with the addition that when the value of a map item is not an object,
the item is transformed to a JSON object with the key assigned to the
field specified by mapSubject
and the value assigned to the field
specified by mapPredicate
.
refScope
If the field contains a relative reference, it must be resolved by
searching for valid document references in each successive parent scope
in the document fragment. For example, a reference of foo
in the
context #foo/bar/baz
will first check for the existence of
#foo/bar/baz/foo
, followed by #foo/bar/foo
, then #foo/foo
and
then finally #foo
. The first valid URI in the search order shall be
used as the fully resolved value of the identifier. The value of the
refScope field is the specified number of levels from the containing
identifier scope before starting the search, so if refScope: 2
then
"baz" and "bar" must be stripped to get the base #foo
and search
#foo/foo
and the #foo
. The last scope searched must be the top
level scope before determining if the identifier cannot be resolved.
secondaryFilesDSL
Field must be expanded based on the the Schema Salad secondary file DSL.
subscope
Append the subscope to the current scope when performing identifier resolution to objects under this field.
4.2 SpecializeDef §
Fields
5. SaladEnumSchema §
Define an enumerated type.
Fields
type
enum
Must be enum
inVocab
If "true" (the default), include the short name of this type in the vocabulary. The vocabulary are all the symbols (field names and other identifiers, such as classes and enum values) which can be used in the document without a namespace prefix. These are the keys of the JSON-LD context. If false, do not include the short name in the vocabulary.
This is useful for specifying schema extensions that will be included in validation without introducing ambiguity by introducing non-standard terms into the vocabulary.
doc
A documentation string for this object, or an array of strings which should be concatenated.
docParent
Hint to indicate that during documentation generation, documentation
for this type should appear in a subsection under docParent
.
docChild
Hint to indicate that during documentation generation, documentation
for docChild
should appear in a subsection under this type.
docAfter
Hint to indicate that during documentation generation, documentation
for this type should appear after the docAfter
section at the same
level.
documentRoot
If true, indicates that the type is a valid at the document root. At
least one type in a schema must be tagged with documentRoot: true
.
6. Documentation §
A documentation section. This type exists to facilitate self-documenting schemas but has no role in formal validation.
Fields
type
documentation
Must be documentation
inVocab
If "true" (the default), include the short name of this type in the vocabulary. The vocabulary are all the symbols (field names and other identifiers, such as classes and enum values) which can be used in the document without a namespace prefix. These are the keys of the JSON-LD context. If false, do not include the short name in the vocabulary.
This is useful for specifying schema extensions that will be included in validation without introducing ambiguity by introducing non-standard terms into the vocabulary.
doc
A documentation string for this object, or an array of strings which should be concatenated.
docParent
Hint to indicate that during documentation generation, documentation
for this type should appear in a subsection under docParent
.
docChild
Hint to indicate that during documentation generation, documentation
for docChild
should appear in a subsection under this type.
docAfter
Hint to indicate that during documentation generation, documentation
for this type should appear after the docAfter
section at the same
level.