+1 Accept Tika as a new podling
On 3/18/07, Jukka Zitting <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
I would like to call the Incubator PMC to vote to incubate the
proposed Tika project. I posted the proposal draft for review a while
ago, and the final proposal text is included below. The only changes
in the proposal text are the addition of Bertrand Delacretaz as the
third mentor and marking Apache Lucene as the sponsor based on a
recent Lucene PMC vote.
Please vote on the proposal that follows. The vote is open for the
next 72 hours and only votes from the Incubator PMC are binding.
[ ] +1 Accept Tika as a new podling
[ ] -1 Do not accept the new podling (provide reason, please)
The proposal can be found at
http://wiki.apache.org/incubator/TikaProposal and is included below
for archival purposes.
Here's my +1
BR,
Jukka Zitting
================================
Tika, a content analysis toolkit
================================
Abstract
--------
Tika is a toolkit for detecting and extracting metadata and structured
text content from various documents using existing parser libraries.
Proposal
--------
The Tika content analysis toolkit will include features for detecting
the content types, character encodings, languages, and other characteristics
of existing documents and for extracting structured text content from
the documents.
The toolkit is targeted especially for search engines and other content
indexing and analysis tools, but will be useful also for other applications
that need to extract meaningful information from documents that might
be presented as nothing else than binary streams.
Instead of implementing its own document parsers, Tika will use existing
parser libraries like Jakarta POI [1] and PDFBox [2].
Background
----------
The initial idea for the Tika project was voiced in April 2006 by
Jérôme Charron and Chris A. Mattman on the Nutch mailing list. The Nutch
parser framework and other content analysis features were seen as
value-added components that would benefit also other projects. The idea
received positive feedback, but lacked the momentum.
The idea was revisited in August 2006 when Jukka Zitting from the
Jackrabbit project contacted Nutch for possible cooperation with similar
ideas. The original Tika idea gained extra momentum and a Google Code
project was set up as a staging area for prototype code before deciding
how to best handle the setup of a new project. After a few initial
commits the activity again declined.
In January 2007 the idea started gaining more momentum when Rida Benjelloun
offered to contribute the Lius project [3] to Apache Lucene and when Mark
Harwood also started looking for a generic toolkit like Tika.
This proposal is the result of the above efforts and related discussions
both in private and on various public forums. Some alternatives to
incubation, like Apache Labs [4] or Jakarta Commons [5], came up during
the discussions but we believe that taking the project to the Incubator
is the best way to start growing a viable community to sustain the Tika
toolkit.
Rationale
---------
There is ever more demand for tools that automatically analyze and index
documents in various formats. Search engines, content repositories, and
other tools often need to extract metadata and text content from documents
given as nothing or little else than a simple octet stream. While there
are a number of existing parser libraries for various document types,
each of them comes with a custom API and there are no generic tools for
automatically determining which parser to use for which documents.
Currently many projects end up creating their custom content analysis
and extraction tools.
The Tika project attempts to remove this duplication of efforts. We
believe that by pooling the efforts of multiple projects we will be able
to create a generic toolkit that exceeds the capabilities and quality of
the custom solutions of any single project. A generic toolkit project
will also provide common ground for the developers of parser libraries
and content applications to interact.
Initial Goals
-------------
The initial goals of the proposed project are:
* Viable community around the Tika codebase
* Active relationships and possible cooperation with related
projects and communities
* Generic parser API for extracting structured text content from
various document formats
* Flexible metadata detection and extraction API
* Java implementations of the metadata standards mentioned below
Current Status
==============
Meritocracy
-----------
All the initial committers are familiar with the meritocracy principles
of Apache, and have already worked on the various source codebases. We will
follow the normal meritocracy rules also with other potential contributors.
Community
---------
There is not yet a clear Tika community. Instead we have a number of people
and related projects with an understanding that a shared toolkit project
would best serve everyone's interests. The primary goal of the incubating
project is to build a self-sustaining community around this shared vision.
Core Developers
---------------
The initial set of developers comes from various backgrounds, with different
but compatible needs for the proposed project.
Alignment
---------
As a generic toolkit the Tika will likely be widely used by various open
source and commercial projects both together with and independent of other
Apache tools like Lucene Java or Jakarta POI. Other Apache projects like
Nutch and Jackrabbit are potential candidates for using Tika as an
embedded component.
Known Risks
===========
Orphaned products
-----------------
There are a number of projects at various stages of maturity that implement
a subset of the proposed features in Tika. For many potential users the
existing tools are already enough, which reduces the demand for a more
generic toolkit. This can also be seen in the slow progress of this
proposal over the past year.
However, once the project gets started we can quickly reach the feature
level of existing tools based on seed code from sources mentioned below.
After that we believe to be able to quickly grow the developer and user
communities based on the benefits of a generic toolkit over custom
alternatives.
Inexperience with Open Source
-----------------------------
All the initial developers have worked on open source before and many are
committers and PMC members within other Apache projects.
Homogenous Developers
---------------------
The initial developers come from a variety of backgrounds and with a
variety of needs for the proposed toolkit.
Reliance on Salaried Developers
-------------------------------
Some of the developers are paid to work on this or related projects,
but the proposed project is not the primary task for anyone.
Relationships with Other Apache Products
----------------------------------------
Tika is related to at least the following Apache projects. None of
the projects is a direct competitor for Tika, but there are many cases
of potential overlap in functionality.
* Apache Lucene [http://lucene.apache.org/java/]
The analysis part of Lucene contains code that might overlap with
some of the potential Tika functionality. There might also be some
overlap regarding the Document model in Lucene.
* Lucene Nutch [http://lucene.apache.org/nutch/]
The Nutch project already contains a parser framework that does
many of the things that Tika is designed to do.
* Apache Jackrabbit [http://jackrabbit.apache.org/]
The Jackrabbit project contains a text extraction component that
also implements a subset of the proposed Tika features.
* Apache UIMA [http://incubator.apache.org/uima/]
The UIMA project provides a framework and pluggable tools for
analyzing text content and extracting information. Example tools
include language identification, sentence boundary detection and
"entity extraction" - finding references to people, places and
organisations. Tika could be used by UIMA to parse text but Tika
should be careful not to duplicate the subsequent text analysis
features UIMA offers.
A Excessive Fascination with the Apache Brand
---------------------------------------------
All of us are familiar with Apache and we have participated in Apache
projects as contributors, committers, and PMC members. We feel that the
Apache Software Foundation is a natural home for a project like this.
Documentation
=============
There are bits and pieces of design discussions and other documentation
around, see for example the following:
* August 2006 nutch-dev: Parser design
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.search.nutch.devel/9685
* September 2006 nutch-dev: Content type detection
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.search.nutch.devel/9969
* October 2006 Lius tutorial
http://www.doculibre.com/lius/doc-1.0_en.html
* February 2007 Tika wiki: Design discussion
http://code.google.com/p/tika/wiki/DesignDiscussion
Standards and conventions related to Tika include the Dublin Core [6]
metadata set, the Shared MIME information draft [7] specification from
freedesktop.org [8], and of course RFCs 2046 [9] and 3066 [10] for
identifying media types and languages.
See also the potential parser libraries listed below for details on the
various document formats that Tika plans to support.
Initial Source
==============
Tika will start with a combination of seed code from the efforts listed
below:
* The Apache Nutch project that contains a parser framework and
various content analysis tools
* The Lius project, an indexing framework for Apache Lucene
* The Apache Jackrabbit project that contains a text extraction
component
No existing codebase is selected as "the" starting point of Tika to avoid
inheriting the world view and design limitations of any single project.
Source and Intellectual Property Submission Plan
================================================
All seed code and other contributions will be handled through the normal
Apache contribution process.
We will also contact other related efforts for possible cooperation
and contributions.
External Dependencies
=====================
Tika will depend on a number of external parser libraries with various
licensing conditions. An initial list of potential dependencies is shown
below.
Library URL License
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Jakarta POi http://jakarta.apache.org/poi/ ASLv2
PDFBox http://www.pdfbox.org/ BSD
NekoHTML http://people.apache.org/~andyc/neko/doc/html/index.html
CyberNeko (like ASL)
JTidy http://jtidy.sourceforge.net/ W3C
There are also some LGPL parser libraries that would be useful. Whether
and how such dependencies could be handled will be discussed during
incubation. No such dependencies will be added to the project before
the legal implications have been cleared.
Cryptography
============
Tika itself will not use cryptography, but it is possible that some of
the external parser libraries will include cryptographic code to handle
features like DRM in various document formats.
Required Resources
==================
Mailing lists
* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subversion Directory
* https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/tika
Issue Tracking
* JIRA Tika (TIKA)
Other Resources
* none
Initial Committers
==================
Name Email CLA
----------------------------------------------------------------
Rida Benjelloun rida dot benjelloun at doculibre dot com yes
Mark Harwood mharwood at apache dot org yes
Chris A. Mattmann mattmann at apache dot org yes
Sami Siren siren at apache dot org yes
Jukka Zitting jukka at apache dot org yes
Affiliations
============
Name Affiliation
-------------------------------------------------
Rida Benjelloun Doculibre inc.
Chris A. Mattmann NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Jukka Zitting Day Management AG
Sponsors
========
Champion
* Jukka Zitting (jukka at apache dot org)
Nominated Mentors
* Doug Cutting (cutting at apache dot org)
* Bertrand Delacretaz (bdelacretaz at apache dot org)
* Jukka Zitting (jukka at apache dot org)
Sponsoring Entity
* Apache Lucene
[1] http://jakarta.apache.org/poi/
[2] http://www.pdfbox.org/
[3] http://sourceforge.net/projects/lius/
[4] http://labs.apache.org/
[5] http://jakarta.apache.org/commons/
[6] http://dublincore.org/
[7] http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Standards_2fshared_2dmime_2dinfo_2dspec
[8] http://freedesktop.org/
[9] http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2046.txt
[10] http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3066.txt
--
Davanum Srinivas :: http://wso2.org/ :: Oxygen for Web Services Developers
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