The SCAPE ecosystem presents a modular infrastructure divided across five main entities, Automated Watch, Automated Planning, Component Management, the Execution Platform and the Digital Object Repository. The Digital Object Repository integrates with almost all aforementioned entities. The SCAPE project delivered two repositories, Fedora 4 and RODA, as reference implementations for the SCAPE ecosystem. These integrate with the SCAPE tools and services via SCAPE APIs such as the Preservation Watch Service, SCOUT, the Preservation Planning Tool, PLATO, the SCAPE Loader Application and the Plan Management GUI. This document describes the two repositories from a technical perspective and how they integrate with the SCAPE tools and services.
Upcoming Events
- The SCAPE Project has closed on 2014-09-30. See Past Events above.
OPF Blogs for SCAPE
- The Open Preservation Foundation Advisory Group, July 2022 30/06/2022OPF would like to thank our members for their attendance and participation in the OAG. We hope to see and meet you all at future...Georgia Moppett
- Meet Stephen Abrams 01/04/2022For our Spring newsletter, we spoke to Stephen Abrams from Harvard Library. Tell us a bit about yourself and your role I came to Harvard...Charlotte Armstrong
- Using a custom Wikibase with Siegfried 28/02/2022One of the more advanced parts of the December presentation with myself and Kat Thornton at Yale University Library – Working with Siegfried, Wikidata, and...Ross Spencer
- Scanned vs native PDFs, how to differentiate them ? 11/02/2022With the arrival of the new law for the legal deposit of the digital material, the library is receiving always more documents in PDF format....Thomas Ledoux
- PDF Validation with ExifTool – quick and not so dirty 04/02/2022How is ExifTool dealing with PDF validation?Yvonne Tunnat
- The Open Preservation Foundation Advisory Group, July 2022 30/06/2022