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Tutorial 02 - Tour of Invenio

In this tutorial, we will explore Invenio from a user's perspective. We will see the different parts of the user interface, explore the REST API and create and search for records.

Table of Contents

Step 1: Prerequisites

First ensure you have initialized your Invenio instance according to the previous tutorial, that you are running the development server and that you have your browser open at the web application's front page.

Step 2: Register a user

First thing we need to do is register a user. Click on the "Sign-up" button, at the top right of the page:

Sign up button

You will be redirected to the user registration form, where you should fill-in an email address and password:

Sign up form

You will then be redirected to the front page, now being logged-in as the user you registered. A verification email will be sent to the address you provided:

Successful registration page

Note: The email with the confirmation link is not actually being sent since we are running a development server. You will see the body of the email being output in the terminal logs of the web app.

Step 3: Go through the account settings

Now that you have created a user, let's have a look at the available settings pages for the user. If you click at your user's email address you will be redirected to the User Profile page. Here you can set things like a username or the full name of the user, or change the account's email address.

Settings page, profile tab

On the left side of the page, you can see the other settings pages listed. The Change password, as you would expect is a page where you can change your account's password:

Settings page, change password tab

The "Security" page is where you can see a list all of the logged-in sessions for the account. You can see there information about the IP address, browser and other information about each session. You can also force a "Logout" of an active session, for security purposes:

Settings page, security tab

Last, but not least, the "Applications" settings page, is where you can manage access tokens used to authenticate your user for REST API access. This is also the place where you can manage your own OAuth applications to implement integrations with your Invenio instance:

Settings page, applications tab

Step 4: Access the records REST API

Your new instance exposes a REST API for performing CRUD operations on records (we will discuss in detail what a "record" is in later sessions).

Let's create a record with some minimal metadata by performing a POST request to the /api/records/ endpoint with a JSON payload:

$ curl -k --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
    --request POST \
    --data '{"title": "Some title", "contributors": [{"name": "Doe, John"}]}' \
    https://localhost:5000/api/records/?prettyprint=1
{
  "created": "2020-05-12T00:28:31.140277+00:00",
  "id": "1",
  "links": {
    "files": "https://localhost:5000/api/records/1/files",
    "self": "https://localhost:5000/api/records/1"
  },
  "metadata": {
    "contributors": [
      {
        "name": "Doe, John"
      }
    ],
    "id": "1",
    "title": "Some title"
  },
  "revision": 0,
  "updated": "2020-05-12T00:28:31.140284+00:00"
}

We can retrieve this newly created record by making a GET /api/records/1 request:

$ curl -k https://localhost:5000/api/records/1?prettyprint=1
{
  "created": "2020-05-12T00:28:31.140277+00:00",
  "id": "1",
  "links": {
    "files": "https://localhost:5000/api/records/1/files",
    "self": "https://localhost:5000/api/records/1"
  },
  "metadata": {
    "contributors": [
      {
        "name": "Doe, John"
      }
    ],
    "id": "1",
    "title": "Some title"
  },
  "revision": 0,
  "updated": "2020-05-12T00:28:31.140284+00:00"
}%

We can search through all records by making a GET /api/records/ request:

$ curl -k https://localhost:5000/api/records/?prettyprint=1
{
  "aggregations": {
    "keywords": {
      "buckets": [],
      "doc_count_error_upper_bound": 0,
      "sum_other_doc_count": 0
    },
    "type": {
      "buckets": [],
      "doc_count_error_upper_bound": 0,
      "sum_other_doc_count": 0
    }
  },
  "hits": {
    "hits": [
      {
        "created": "2020-05-12T00:28:31.140277+00:00",
        "id": "1",
        "links": {
          "files": "https://localhost:5000/api/records/1/files",
          "self": "https://localhost:5000/api/records/1"
        },
        "metadata": {
          "contributors": [
            {
              "name": "Doe, John"
            }
          ],
          "id": "1",
          "title": "Some title"
        },
        "revision": 0,
        "updated": "2020-05-12T00:28:31.140284+00:00"
      }
    ],
    "total": 1
  },
  "links": {
    "self": "https://localhost:5000/api/records/?sort=mostrecent&size=10&page=1"
  }
}

Note: By default this API doesn't require any authentication. We will address this in later sessions.

Step 5: Search and Record UI

The REST API is not the only way to display information on records. If you navigate to the front page and click the search button you will go the records search page:

Front page search bar

On the search page, besides the actual results, you can also see the total number of results, paginate through them and sort by various options.

Search page

Let's create some more records, to demonstrate the querying capabilities:

Search page with result list

Let's say, we want to get all of the records written by "Smith" we could naively type Smith in the search box, but that would give us all records that contain the text "Smith" in any of their fields (even the title):

Search query

To refine our results we can search on a specific field by searching for something like contributors.name:Smith:

Search query fields

If you click on any of the record results you will be redirected to the record's page, which at the moment displays in a very basic way the metadata:

Result record page

Step 6: Create an admin user through the CLI

Let's a crete a new user and give them admin permissions to the instance:

$ cd my-site
$ pipenv run invenio users create [email protected] --password 123456 --active
User created successfully.
{'email': '[email protected]', 'password': '****', 'active': True}
$ pipenv run invenio roles add [email protected] admin
Role "admin - None" added to user "User <id=2, [email protected]>" successfully.

Step 7: Access the Admin Panel

If you now login as the newly created [email protected] user with password 123456, a new "Administration" option will be visible in the user menu:

User menu administration option

If you click on it, you will be redirected to the Admin panel page, where you can manage a variety of internal entities for your Invenio instance:

Records administration page Users administration page

Step 8: Access the OAI-PMH endpoint

The instance also provides by default an OAI-PMH endpoint at https://localhost:5000/oai2d. Let's access the Identify verb via curl:

$ curl -k "https://localhost:5000/oai2d?verb=Identify"
<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
<OAI-PMH xmlns="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/OAI-PMH.xsd">
  <responseDate>2019-03-18T23:21:19Z</responseDate>
  <request verb="Identify">https://localhost:5000/oai2d</request>
  <Identify>
    <repositoryName>My site</repositoryName>
    <baseURL>https://localhost:5000/oai2d</baseURL>
    <protocolVersion>2.0</protocolVersion>
    <adminEmail>[email protected]</adminEmail>
    <earliestDatestamp>0001-01-01T00:00:00Z</earliestDatestamp>
    <deletedRecord>no</deletedRecord>
    <granularity>YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ssZ</granularity>
  </Identify>
</OAI-PMH>

What did we learn

  • How to register a user and the UI views a registered user has access to
  • Basic REST API operations
  • How to use the search and record UI pages
  • How to create an admin user and access the Admin panel
  • Where the OAI-PMH endpoint is