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specberus

Specberus is a checker used at W3C to validate the compliance of Technical Reports with publication rules.

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Specberus

Specberus is a checker used at W3C to validate the compliance of Technical Reports with publication rules.

Installation

Specberus is a Node.js application, distributed through npm. Alternatively, you can clone the repository and run:

npm install -d

In order to get all the dependencies installed. Naturally, this requires that you have a reasonably recent version of Node installed.

Running

Currently there is no shell to run Specberus. Later we will add both Web and CLI interfaces based on the same core library.

Syntax and command-line parameters

$ npm start [PORT]

Meaning of positional parameters:

  1. PORT: where Specberus will be listening for HTTP connections. (Default 80.)

Examples:

$ npm start
$ npm start 3001

Testing

Testing is done using mocha. Simply run:

mocha

from the root and you will be running the test suite. Mocha can be installed with:

npm install -g mocha

Some of the tests can on occasion take a long time, or fail outright because a remote service is unavailable. To work around this, you can set SKIP_NETWORK:

SKIP_NETWORK=1 mocha

API

The interface you get when you require("specberus") is that from lib/validator. It returns a Specberus instance that is properly configured for operation in the Node environment (there is nominal support for running Specberus under other environments, but it isn't usable at this time).

The validator interface supports a validate(options) methods, which takes an object with the following fields:

  • url: URL of the content to check. One of url, source, file, or document must be specified and if several are they will be used in this order.
  • source: A String with the content to check.
  • file: A file system path to the content to check.
  • document: A DOM Document object to be checked.
  • profile: A profile object which defines the validation. Required. See below.
  • events: An event sink which supports the same interface as Node's EventEmitter. Required. See below for the events that get generated.

Emitting metadata about the document

Every time the validator finds/deduces a piece of metadata about the document, it emits a metadata event. metadata messages contain two arguments: key and value. Keys are unique IDs, while the types of values are different according to the specific kind of metadata.

These properties are now returned when found:

  • docDate: The date associated to the document.
  • title: The (possible) title of the document.
  • process: The process rules, as they appear on the text of the document, eg '14 October 2005'.
  • deliverers: The deliverer(s) responsible for the document (WGs, TFs, etc); an Array of Objects, each one with these properties:
    • homepage: URL of the group's home page.
    • name: name of the group, exactly as it is found in the hyperlink on the document.
  • delivererIDs ID(s) of the deliverer(s); an Array of Numbers.
  • thisVersion: URL of this version of the document.
  • previousVersion: URL of the previous version of the document (the last one, if multiple are shown).
  • latestVersion: URL of the latest version of the document.
  • editorIDs: ID(s) of the editor(s) responsible for the document; an Array of Numbers.
  • editorsDraft: URL of the latest editor's draft.
  • status: ID (acronym) of the profile detected in the document; a String. See file public/data/profiles.json.

As an example, validating http://www.w3.org/TR/2014/REC-exi-profile-20140909/ (REC) emits these pairs of metadata:

{ docDate: Tue Sep 09 2014 00:00:00 GMT+0900 (JST) }
{ title: 'Efficient XML Interchange (EXI) Profile for limiting usage of dynamic memory' }
{ thisVersion: 'http://www.w3.org/TR/2014/REC-exi-profile-20140909/' }
{ latestVersion: 'http://www.w3.org/TR/exi-profile/' }
{ previousVersion: 'http://www.w3.org/TR/2014/PR-exi-profile-20140506/' }
{ editorIDs: [] }
{ status: 'REC' }
{ process: '14 October 2005' }
{ deliverers: [
   { homepage: 'http://www.w3.org/XML/EXI/',
     name: 'Efficient XML Interchange Working Group' }
  ] }

If you download that very spec, edit it to include the following metadata…

<dt>Editors:</dt>
<dd data-editor-id="329883">Youenn Fablet, Canon Research Centre France</dd>
<dd data-editor-id="387297">Daniel Peintner, Siemens AG</dd>

…and serve it locally from your machine, Specberus will spit also editor IDs:

{ docDate: Tue Sep 09 2014 00:00:00 GMT+0900 (JST) }
{ title: 'Efficient XML Interchange (EXI) Profile for limiting usage of dynamic memory' }
{ latestVersion: 'http://www.w3.org/TR/exi-profile/' }
{ previousVersion: 'http://www.w3.org/TR/2014/PR-exi-profile-20140506/' }
{ editorIDs: [ '329883', '387297' ] }
{ status: 'REC' }
{ process: '14 October 2005' }
{ deliverers: [
   { homepage: 'http://www.w3.org/XML/EXI/',
     name: 'Efficient XML Interchange Working Group' }
  ] }

Another example: when applied to http://www.w3.org/TR/wai-aria-1.1/ (WD), the following metadata will be found:

{ docDate: Thu Dec 11 2014 00:00:00 GMT+0900 (JST) }
{ title: 'Accessible Rich Internet Applications (WAI-ARIA) 1.1' }
{ thisVersion: 'http://www.w3.org/TR/2014/WD-wai-aria-1.1-20141211/' }
{ latestVersion: 'http://www.w3.org/TR/wai-aria-1.1/' }
{ previousVersion: 'http://www.w3.org/TR/2014/WD-wai-aria-1.1-20140612/' }
{ editorIDs: [] }
{ status: 'WD' }
{ process: '1 August 2014' }
{ editorsDraft: 'http://w3c.github.io/aria/aria/aria.html' }
{ deliverers: [
   { homepage: 'http://www.w3.org/WAI/PF/',
     name: 'Protocols & Formats Working Group' },
   { homepage: 'http://www.w3.org/html/wg/',
     name: 'HTML Working Group' }
  ] }

Profiles

Profiles are simple objects that support the following API:

  • name: A String being the name of this profile.
  • rules: An Array of rule objects which are checked in this profile.

A profile is basically a configuration of what to check. You can load a specific profile from under lib/profiles or create your own.

Here follows the current hierarchy of profiles. Each profile inherits all rules from its parent profile. Profiles that are identical to its parent profile, ie that do not add any new rules, are marked too.

  • base
    • TR
      • WG-NOTE (identical)
        • FPWG-NOTE (identical)
      • IG-NOTE
        • FPIG-NOTE (identical)
      • WD (identical)
      • PER
      • RSCND (identical)
      • PR
      • CR
      • FPWD (identical)
      • SUBM
      • MEM-SUBM
      • TEAM-SUBM
      • CG-NOTE
      • FPLC
      • REC
      • LC
  • dummy

Validation events

For a given checking run, the event sink you specify will be receiving a bunch of events as indicated below. Events are shown as having parameters since those are passed to the event handler.

  • start-all(profile-name): Fired first to indicate that the profile's checking has started.
  • end-all(profile-name): Fired last to indicate that the profile's checking has completed. When you receive this you are promised that all testing operations, including asynchronous ones, have terminated.
  • done(rule-name): Fired when a specific rule has finished processing, including its asynchronous tasks.
  • ok(rule-name): Fired to indicate that a rule has succeeded. There is only one ok per rule. There cannot also be err events but there can be warning events.
  • err(error-name, data): Fired when an error is detected. The data contains further details, that depend on the error but should feature a message field. There can be multiple errors for a given rule. There cannot also be ok events but there can be warnings.
  • warning(warnings-name, data): Fired for non-fatal problems with the document that may nevertheless require investigation. There may be several for a rule.
  • info(info-name, data): Fired for additional information items detected by the validator.
  • metadata(key, value): Fired for every piece of document metadata found by the validator.
  • exception(message): Fired when there is a system error, such as a File not found error. message contains details about this error. All exceptions are displayed on the error console in addition to this event being fired.

Writing rules

Rules are simple modules that just expose a check(sr, cb) method. They receive a Specberus object and a callback, use the Specberus object to fire validation events and call the callback when they're done.

The Specberus object exposes the following API that's useful for validation:

  • $. A jQuery-like interface to the document being checked.
  • loader. The loader object that loaded the content, which exposes the content's url and source if they are known.
  • sink. The event target on which to fire validation events.
  • version. The Specberus version.
  • checkSelector(selector, rule-name, cb). Some rules need to do nothing other than to check that a selector returns some content. For this case, the rule can just call this method with the selector and its callback, and Specberus will conveniently take care of all the rest.
  • norm(text). Returns a whitespace-normalised version of the text.
  • getDocumentDate(). Returns a Date object that matches the document's date as specified in the headers' h2.
  • getDocumentDateElement(). Returns the element that contains the document's date.

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Package last updated on 22 Jul 2015

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