Esmé,

Thanks. I've got my own going okay, and the basics seem to work. The next step, as always, is seeing what happens with real live data, rather than the minimal test data I have in there. Live-fire data, I find, exposes more and more unanticipated quirks!

Patrick

On 07/08/2015 04:27 PM, Esmé Cowles wrote:
And if there aren't any open Fedora 4 repositories forthcoming, you can always 
use fcrepo4-vagrant to spin up your own pretty easily:

https://github.com/fcrepo4-labs/fcrepo4-vagrant

-Esme

On 07/08/15, at 4:01 PM, Tom Cramer <tcra...@stanford.edu> wrote:

Hi Patrick,

To my knowledge, Penn State has one of the current Fedora 4 repositories in 
production; a few others are close (including the Royal Library of Denmark). 
You might also want to post th is query on the fedora-t...@googlegroups.com 
and/or fedora-commun...@googlegroups.com list.

Hope this helps,

- Tom

PS. Has there been any thought that Omeka S might also be IIIF-friendly 
<http://iiif.io/>, and able to present image-based resources from any IIIF-compatible 
repository by consuming both the IIIF image and presentation APIs 
<http://iiif.io/technical-details.html>? I can muster up some live IIIF API 
endpoints, if you are interested.





On Jul 8, 2015, at 9:07 AM, Patrick Murray-John <patrickmjc...@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi all,

The Omeka <http://omeka.org> web publication tool for GLAMs is working on a new 
version, Omeka S, that will include modules for connecting to various other systems, 
including Fedora 4.

Does anyone have a Fedora 4 installation with open API that we could use to 
test the basic reading and import mechanisms against? This would be for 
development and testing purposes only.

Many thanks,

Patrick Murray-John
Omeka Director of Developer Outreach

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