Features/Sugar Bundles


Summary

One file format to transfer various types of content in/out to/from sugar environment with keeping metadata.

Owner

Current status

  • Targeted release: 0.88
  • Last updated: Wed Nov 25 18:10:45 UTC 2009
  • Percentage of completion: 0%

Detailed Description

In fact, this feature is an end users oriented(technically we not invent super format for various types of content, just unified sugar wrapper). Users all time know that there is only one type of sugar objects, they see it as a Journal item, one file with suffix .xo in non-sugar environments etc. So they need only upload this file to Journal and click to activate it.

At present, we have several file types that user can encounter out of sugar:

  • activity bundles(.xo)
  • content bundles(.xol)
  • journal bundles(.xoj)

All these files have different suffixes and after uploading to Journal have different behaviour.

Sugar Bundles are intended to unify object related workflow:

  • one type of objects out of sugar - files with .xo suffix
  • one type of behaviour after uploading such files to the Journal - you need to click on object in Journal to activate it

So, Sugar Bundles not only changes import/export part of sugar but also change lauch workflow, uploaded objects from .xo files could be:

  • activity_id less Journal entries, launch some activity to open this object
    • just various files that were created out of sugar
    • former Library bundles will be opened in Browse
  • Journal entries with activity_id, launch poper activity to open this object
  • activities, launch it with newly created object

Specification

Sugar bundle should have METADATA file in the top directory(or in <some_name>/ directory) of .xo bundle. This file is in INI format which describes how to setup bundle.

METADATA file can have one or several sections(depends on installation method) that describe metadata fields of final entry(ies) in Journal.

Field Flags Notes
entry mandatory defines access point to within bundle (e.g. index.html for library bundles)
mime_type mandatory define MIME type for final Journal entry
uid ignored
* optional any system, users predefined and arbitrary Datastore field
* optional any tag, depends on content(inherited from activity bundles etc.)

Any field in METADATA file can have _file suffix, in that case content of this field(substring w/o _file suffix) will be fetched from file inside of the bundle.

Benefit to Sugar

Out of sugar environment, users know that there is only one type of sugar objects and only thing they should do to activate them is uploading .xo file to Journal and click it.

So if one user uploaded Journal object(any type - activity, activity object, content library etc.) to the web, another user can download/transfer-through-many-non-sugar-environments it and open in his sugar environment with keeping all metadata(he will get the same Journal entry).

We can also collect users object on public server like ASLO to have server like sharing feature.

Scope

  • sugar
  • sugar-toolkit

How To Test

Features/Sugar Bundles/Testing

User Experience

Since we have only one type of sugar objects, user all time knows that if there is a file with suffix .xo he can download/open-in-journal it and need only click to activate it in sugar.

Dependencies

Nothing except existed sucrose dependencies.

Contingency Plan

None necessary, revert to previous release behaviour.

Documentation

Release Notes

The Sugar Release Notes inform end-users about what is new in the release. An Example is 0.84/Notes. The release notes also help users know how to deal with platform changes such as ABIs/APIs, configuration or data file formats, or upgrade concerns. If there are any such changes involved in this feature, indicate them here. You can also link to upstream documentation if it satisfies this need. This information forms the basis of the release notes edited by the release team and shipped with the release.

Comments and Discussion